Inspirational thoughts from Mike Powell

Mikepowell_2 Last week UCLA announced that jumps coach Mike Powell is stepping away from the track and field team to focus on some of his other responsibilities. With the Olympics right around the corner, the long-jump world-record holder is going to be a hot commodity on broadcasts and at special events. Powell is also a motivational speaker and shares the story of how he achieved greatness.

After this spring's dual meet against USC, Powell has showed that he's one of the nicest guys you'll ever find around the track. I dug into the archives and found this quick interview ...

Read on »

 

Off-track

UCLA and USC track meet, 100 meter race.

The UCLA-USC track and field dual meet used to be one of the hottest tickets in town. The two programs have won 42 combined national championships. From what I gather, fans used to be hanging onto fences to watch the sold-out event. Nowadays, the most expensive ticket is less than two gallons of gas. The meet is obviously a better deal.

Last week, I mentioned that the UCLA-USC meet was coming up, but even after it ended Saturday it took me several days to realize what a great event it was for purists.

Sports is as entertaining as ever — if not more so — but it certainly isn't pure. Drug scandals have torn the heart out of baseball, track and field, and cycling. The Olympics, once an adequate reason to halt wars and ignore all differences, are being hijacked by special interests. Even sports journalism is getting uglier with Luddite buffoonery (see: Bissinger, Buzz).

Read on »

 

Crosstown showdowns winding down

UCLA and USC have a storied legacy when it comes to track and field. On Saturday, they will meet at UCLA's Drake Stadium for the biggest dual meet of the season and one of the last chances to see the rivalry this school year.

From UCLA:

Saturday's portion of the meet will get underway at 11 a.m. on the field with the women's javelin and 11:55 a.m. on the track with the women's 5000m. FSN PrimeTicket will broadcast the meet live beginning at 1 pm. Live stats will also be available on the UCLA website.

You also can read USC's release.

Expect mild temperatures in the mid-60s. It's $8 to park and admission rates can be found here (cash only).

 

Sunday syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

UCLA’s hopes for its 101st national championship were dashed on Saturday and there was bad news on the baseball diamond as well. But spring football has started and the two no. 1-ranked women’s teams just keep winning. Here's the full report on all the Bruin teams:

Baseball:

>> Last week: No. 23 UCLA started the week well with a 6-2 over San Diego State on Tuesday (Garrett Claypool was the winning pitcher, 1-0) in the first game of a 13-game homestand at Jackie Robinson Stadium. But the Bruins lost both of the first two games of its weekend series with USC, 6-1 on Friday night (Tim Murphy had 10 strikeouts in 7 1/3 innings, but took the loss and is 2-2), and 7-4 on Saturday (Charles Brewer, 3-4, too the loss.

>> This week: The Bruins are now13-12 on the season and 2-3 in the Pac-10. They finish the series with USC today at Jackie Robinson Stadium at 1 p.m. UCLA will play UC Irvine on Tuesday at 6 p.m. and then has a three-game series with UC Riverside over the weekend, all at Jackie Robinson Stadium.

Football:

>> Last week: The Bruins started spring practice on Thursday and two juniors, linebacker Reggie Carter and cornerback Alterraun Verner were selected for the Lott Trophy Watch List.

>> This week: Spring ball continues with afternoon practices on Monday and Tuesday, both starting at 3:55 p.m., a day off on Wednesday and sessions on Thursday (3:55 p.m.) and Saturday (11 a.m.). All sessions will be held on Spaulding Field and are open to the public.

Rowing:

>> Last week: UCLA is ranked 13th in the nation and won both varsity four races and was second to Virginia in both eight-oared races in the Pac-10 Challenge on March 29-30. Yesterday at the San Diego Classic, the Bruin varsity eight boats finished second in separate races to Stanford and Washington and the open eight boat won its race.

>> This week: Competition continues at the San Diego Classic today and then the Bruins are off until the Stanford Invitational on April 19-20.

Softball:

>> Last week: Top-ranked UCLA continued its winning ways with three victories at Easton Stadium: 7-6 in eight innings over Washington last Tuesday (Anjelica Selden won, now 16-2), then sophomore Megan Langenfeld (5-0) pitched 3 2/3 innings of relief to help the Bruins score a 3-1 win over no. 7 Stanford Friday and freshman Donna Kerr (13-1) picked up the win in UCLA’s 2-1 victory over no. 21 California on Saturday.

>> This week: UCLA is now 34-3 overall and 6-0 in Pac-10 play and will face Cal once more today at noon to conclude a seven-game homestand. The Bruins head to the desert to face Arizona State in Tempe on Friday and then have back-to-back games with Arizona in Tucson on Saturday and Sunday.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins’ hopes for a 12th national championship ended in the national semifinals in a 78-63 loss to Memphis in San Antonio. UCLA finished 35-4, winning the most games in school history, but fell short of its goal. The 2004 recruiting class that included Jordan Farmar, Arron Afflalo, Josh Shipp and Lorenzo Mata-Real (Farmar and Afflalo left early, but Shipp and Mata-Real were on this year's team) had a four-year legacy that included three Final Fours, three Pac-10 regular-season titles, two Pac-10 Tournament titles, three consecutive seasons of winning 30 or more games and an overall record of 115-28 (.804).

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: The third-ranked Bruins led the Administaff Augusta State Invitational in Evans, Georgia by two shots after the first round on Friday, but heavy rains cancelled the second round and the tournament will be completed on Sunday as 36-hole event. Junior Lucas Lee was leading the field at -3 after Friday’s round.

>> This week: This Blue Team (second squad) will be in Scottsdale, Arizona for Wyoming Cowboy Classic on Monday and Tuesday.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The no. 4-ranked Bruins had a good weekend, disposing of no. 31 California, 6-1, on Friday and no. 25 Stanford, 6-1, both at the Los Angeles Tennis Center. It was the 11th straight win for UCLA since losing its only match of the season to no. 1 Virginia.

>> This week: The Bruins are now 17-1 on the season and 4-0 in Pac-10 play, with four dual matches left before the Pac-10 Championships. Next weekend, UCLA travels to Arizona on Friday and no. 22 Arizona State on Saturday.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: UCLA is ranked seventh in the nation and the throwing corps had a strong showing at the Texas Relays in Austin. Boldizsar Kocsor won the hammer throw against a good field on Thursday and discus thrower Greg Garza and shot putter John Caufield finished second in their events.

>> This week: The Bruin team will compete in the Rafer Johnson-Jackie Joyner-Kersee Invitational at Drake Stadium from Thursday-Saturday.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: No. 7 UCLA defeated 14th-ranked UC Santa Barbara in four games on Wednesday, but fell to second-ranked Cal State Northridge on Friday evening on Senior Night in Pauley Pavilion in straight sets. All-American libero Tony Ker was honored before the game, but the Bruins could not win a set from the Matadors and fell to fifth place in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation standings.

>> This week: UCLA is now 16-12 on the season and 11-9 in the MPSF. It will complete its regular-season play with matches at Stanford on Friday and Pacific on Saturday. The Bruins are 1-0 against both teams this season, winning in Pauley Pavilion in January.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: Senior Lindsay Pluimer was selected to participate in the WNBA’s Pre-Draft Camp in Tampa this weekend in advance of the WNBA Draft on Wednesday.

Women’s Golf:

>> Last week: The Bruins ranked no. 1 in the country, but are playing in the PING/Arizona State Invitational without freshman star Maria Jose Uribe, who is playing as an amateur in the Kraft Nabisco Championship. Through two of the three rounds, the Bruins are in sixth place, 15 strokes behind tournament leader USC.

>> This week: UCLA finishes up in Tempe tomorrow and then has a week off prior to the Pac-10 Championships in Palos Verdes on April 21-23.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: Bruin gymnasts Ariana Berlin, Anna Li, Jordan Schwikert and Tasha Schwikert were named to the Pac-10 All-Conference team. Berlin, Li and Jordan Schwikert received first-team honors in the all-around, while Tasha Schwikert was named to the first team on vault and uneven bars.

>> This week: Ninth-ranked UCLA will compete in the Southeast Regional in Gainesville, Florida on April 12. Third-ranked Florida is the top seed in the regional and UCLA will also compete against Nebraska, North Carolina State, West Virginia and North Carolina. The top two finishers in the regional will advance to the NCAA Championships in Athens, Georgia from April 24-26.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: No. 9 UCLA split a weekend series with higher-ranked opponents, upsetting no. 6 California in Berkeley, 4-3, thanks to freshman Andrea Remynse’s three-set win (including a second-set tiebreaker) over Cal’s Claire Ilcinkas. Yesterday, the Bruins lost to fifth-ranked Stanford, 5-2, in Palo Alto for their first loss in Pac-10 play this season.

>> This week: The Bruins are now 15-5 overall and 4-1 in conference and have three dual matches left in the season, all at home. UCLA will face Arizona on Friday at 1:30 p.m. and Arizona State on Saturday at noon, both at the Los Angeles Tennis Center.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: A limited team competed at the Texas Relays and Stanford Invitational. Senior Ingrid Kantola had the best performance with a win in the university section of the pole vault on Friday and a fourth-place finish with a season best of 13-5 1/4 in the open pole vault on Saturday.

>> This week: The Rafer Johnson-Jackie Joyner-Kersee Invitational will be held at Drake Stadium from Thursday through Sunday.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1 UCLA continued to mow down its opponents, beating California 10-4 behind three goals from Katie Rulon at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center on Saturday.

>> This week: The Bruins are now 23-0 overall and 9-0 in Mountain Pacific Sports Federation play. They’ll take on Pacific today at Sunset Canyon at 1 p.m. and then finish their collegiate dual-match schedule next week with games against San Diego State (1 p.m.) and Sonoma State (3 p.m.) on Saturday, April 12 and Arizona State on Sunday (1 p.m.).

 

Weekend warmup: The Gauntlet is in play!

In the dead of winter, UCLA trailed USC in the Lexus Gauntlet standings by a score of 50 to 12 1/2, with 57 1/2 points needed to win. USC has won the Gauntlet in each of the even-numbered years (2002-04-06) in which it has been awarded and the Bruins have won in all odd-numbered years (2003-05-07), and it looked like that would continue.

But like Lazarus, the Bruins have risen. Going into this weekend’s crucial baseball series with USC, UCLA has closed the gap. It is now 45 points to 32 1/2, which requires some explanation.

The Gauntlet standings are based on the season’s series between the schools in the various sports in which both compete. As USC went on a long winning streak against the Bruins beginning in the fall, the score mounted for the Trojans.

The Bruins have been winning of late, however, and the Pac-10 Men’s Basketball Tournament victory over USC gave UCLA a 2-1 lead in the season series and all 10 points in the Gauntlet standings; USC lost the five points posted for it after an early season win over the Bruins at Pauley Pavilion.

Now the race to 57 1/2 is on, and the Bruins have a  baseball series against USC this weekend at Jackie Robinson Stadium. Already up one game from a nonconference win during the Major League Baseball Urban Invitational, if the Bruins can win two of three, they will take the season series and add 2 1/2 points to close the score to 45-35.

And it gets better. The next showdown will be April 18-19, when the men’s and women’s tennis teams play; the Bruins won matches against both Trojan teams earlier in the year, so two wins could bring the score to 45-40.

That would leave men’s and women’s golf, rowing and the track and field dual meet at Drake Stadium to settle the matter. In men’s golf, the teams are ranked fifth (UCLA) and sixth (USC) in the nation in the current coaches’ poll, and the women are ranked second (UCLA) and third (USC). In rowing, USC is ranked fourth nationally while the Bruins are 13th. And in track and field, the dual meet May 3 at Drake Stadium is too close to call for both men and women because the season is just getting started.

It’s still USC’s gauntlet to lose . . . but it might!

There’s also plenty of action for Bruin teams on campus this weekend, in addition to the men’s basketball team in the NCAA Final Four:

Baseball:

>> As noted above, the 23rd-ranked Bruins will play host to USC in a three-game series at Jackie Robinson Stadium beginning at 6 tonight. UCLA (13-10) is on a six-game win streak against Troy (13-14) and will start ace lefty Tim Murphy (2-1, 3.61 ERA) tonight, Charles Brewer (3-2, 4.67) at 2 p.m. Saturday and lefty Gavin Brooks (1-2, 6.75) on Sunday. All three games will be audio and videocast at uclabruins.com, with Danny Lee and Tim Wilhelm on the microphones.

Football:

>> Spring practice continues with sessions beginning at 3:55 p.m. today and 1 p.m. Saturday (this is a time change). The spring game will be held at 7 p.m. April 26 at the Rose Bowl.

Softball:

>> The No. 1-ranked Bruins (32-3) edged Washington, 5-4, in eight innings Wednesday to move to 3-0 in Pac-10 play. They will be host to No. 7 Stanford at 1 p.m. today and 21st-ranked California at 3 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday. All three games will be audiocast at uclabruins.com, with Darren Preston and Jeff Knox on the scene.

Men’s basketball:

>> The 35-3 Bruins — who have won more games than any team in school history — are in the NCAA Final Four for the third year in a row and will take on 37-1 Memphis on Saturday at the Alamodome in San Antonio. Game time is at 3:07 p.m.;  Jim Nantz and Billy Packer will  call the game on CBS and Chris Roberts and Don MacLean will be on the air on KLAC-AM (570) and the Bruin radio network. A postgame "Bruins Live" show is planned on FSN West or Prime Ticket (check your local cable listings).

Men’s tennis:

>> The 15-1 Bruins (2-0 in Pac-10 play) are ranked fourth in the nation and will take on No. 31 California at 1:30 p.m. today at the Los Angeles Tennis Center and then face 25th-ranked Stanford, also on campus, at 1 p.m. Saturday.

Men’s volleyball:

>> UCLA is 16-11 on the season and 11-8 in Mountain Pacific Sports Federation play, but that’s good enough for fourth and, most important, the Bruins are in good position for a home game in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament. After a crucial, four-set win Wednesday over UC Santa Barbara, UCLA will play host to league-leader and No. 2-ranked Cal State Northridge (20-5) at 7 tonight during Senior Night at Pauley Pavilion. Three-time All-American libero Tony Ker will be honored and T-shirts will be given away to the first 500 fans in attendance. The game will be audiocast on uclabruins.com, with Darren Preston on the call.

Women’s water polo:

>> No. 1-ranked and undefeated UCLA (22-0) will be in the pool again Saturday against No. 6 California (14-7) and Sunday against Pacific (4-21). Both matches will start at 1 p.m. at Sunset Canyon Recreation Center. Saturday is Alumni Day, with an alumni match starting at 10 a.m., an alumni lunch at noon and an after-the-game Final Four viewing party at the Westwood Brewing Co.

On the road:

>> Bruin teams competing outside of Southern California include the No. 3 men’s and No. 1 women’s golf teams at the Administaff Augusta State Invitational and PING/ASU Sun Devil Invitational, respectively; the men’s and women’s track teams, at the Texas Relays and Stanford Invitational; and the No. 9 women’s tennis team (14-4) playing at No. 6 California at 1:30 p.m. today and at No. 5 Stanford at noon Saturday.

 

Sunday syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

The Bruin men’s basketball team is heading back to the Final Four once again, but there was a lot of other important action this week:

Baseball:

>> Last week: What to make of this 2008 UCLA baseball team? After losing three in a row to Long Beach State, the Bruins dropped from No. 11 in the nation to No. 23 and then lost another game, at San Diego State on Tuesday, 6-3 (Matt Drummond, 0-2, took the loss). But then UCLA went to Tucson for a three-game series against No. 6 Arizona and wins two in a row: 4-3 in 10 innings on Friday night (third baseman Jermaine Curtis had four hits and Drummond, 2-1, won in relief) and 20-8 on Saturday thanks to a 7-for-7, four RBI and four runs scored day by first baseman Casey Haerther (Charles Brewer, 3-2, got the win).

>> This week: The Bruins (12-9, 2-0 Pac-10) finish their series with Arizona today in Tucson, then head home for a 13-game homestand, starting with San Diego State on Tuesday, April 1 at 6 p.m. Then UCLA will square off with rival USC at Jackie Robinson Stadium on Friday (6 p.m.), Saturday (2 p.m.) and Sunday (1 p.m.).

Football:

>> This week: Spring football starts on Spaulding Field on campus April 3 and will continue through April 26 with the Spring game at the Rose Bowl. This week’s practices are open to the public, starting at 3:55 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday.

Rowing:

>> Last week: The Bruins debuted at No. 13 in the national rankings and are in Redwood Shores, Calif., this weekend for the Pac-10 Challenge against three top 10 teams in Virginia, Ohio State and California on Saturday and Sunday.

>> This week: The Bruins will be in the San Diego Crew Classic in Mission Bay on Saturday and Sunday.

Softball:

>> Last week: UCLA is now the top-ranked team in the nation and won its first two Pac-10 games convincingly this weekend. UCLA defeated Oregon State, 3-0, on Friday (Anjelica Selden, 14-2, got the win) and then freshman Donna Kerr lowered her ERA to 0.48 and improved to 12-1 with a 2-0 shutout of Oregon on Saturday. Megan Langenfeld picked up saves by pitching scoreless seventh innings in both games.

>> This week: UCLA (30-3) faces Oregon again today at Easton Stadium at noon, then has four more home games coming up this week: Washington on Wednesday, Stanford on Friday and California on Saturday and Sunday.

>> Of note: Four Bruins were named to the American team for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing this August: catcher Stacey Nuveman, first baseman Tairia Mims Flowers, third baseman Andrea Duran and shortstop Natasha Watley. Triple gold medalist pitcher Lisa Fernandez was not selected for the team, but is listed as an injury replacement; she had taken three years off from softball to start her family and did not regain her earlier form. The U.S. Team will face the Bruins in an exhibition on Tuesday evening, April 22, at Easton Stadium.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: UCLA (35-3) has won 14 straight games and is heading to San Antonio for the Final Four, the third season in a row that the Bruins will play in the national semifinals. UCLA defeated Western Kentucky, 88-78, on Thursday, cruising to a 21-point lead at half and then holding on after a furious rally by the Hilltoppers. On Saturday, UCLA defeated Xavier, 76-57, building a nine-point edge at halftime and then extending the lead behind 19 points each from Kevin Love and Darren Collison.

>> This week: The Bruins will play Saturday in one national semifinal and if they win, will play for the national championship on Monday, April 7.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: Third-ranked UCLA led after 18 holes, but fell to seventh in the U.S. Collegiate Championships in Alpharetta, Ga. The top Bruin finisher was senior Kevin Chappell, who tied for 10th. In a separate tournament, five individual Bruins competed in the Cal Poly Men’s Intercollegiates with freshman Philip Francis tying for seventh in the best finish by a UCLA golfer.

>> This week: UCLA remains in the south and will play in the Administaff Augusta State Invitational at the Champions Retreat Golf Course in Augusta, Ga., beginning Friday.

Men’s Soccer:

>> Last week: Five Bruins made up a quarter of the U.S. Under-23 National Team squad that qualified for the Beijing Olympic tournament at last week’s CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Tournament. Defenders Kamani Hill (2004-05), Patrick Ianni (2003-05) and Marvell Wynne (2004-05) and forwards Chad Barrett (2003-04) and Sal Zizzo (2005-06) were all on the squad and at least one Bruin started in every game. The U.S. finished the tournament with a 3-1-1 record, won Group A and allowed just two goals while scoring six.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The Bruins are ranked sixth in the nation and looked like it this past week, shutting out Loyola Marymount, 7-0, at the Los Angeles Tennis Center on Tuesday, then winning its opening Pac-10 matches easily, stomping No. 20 Washington, 6-1, in Seattle on Friday and Oregon, 6-1, in Eugene on Saturday.

>> This week: UCLA has won nine matches in a row and is 15-1 on the season. Next up are California and Stanford in matches to be played Friday and Saturday at the Los Angeles Tennis Center, starting at 1:30 p.m. and 1 p.m., respectively.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: The Bruins were ranked seventh in the nation in the U.S. Track Coaches Assn.’s pre-season poll and then racked up 238 points to win the Cal/Nevada Championships easily in a two-meet in Fresno. Senior John Caulfield threw a lifetime best of 197-10 -– best in the nation so far -– to win the discus and he also won the shot put with a seasonal best of 62-7 3/4. UCLA won seven events in all, including Henry Hagenbuch’s lifetime-best 3:50.65 in the 1500 m; Boldizsar Kocsor’s win in the hammer (217-3), Elijah Wells in the 400 m (48.02), Jonathan Clark in the triple jump at 49-9 1/4 and vaulter Johnny Quinn with a lifetime best of 17-0 3/4.

>> This week: UCLA will send selected individuals to the Texas Relays in Austin.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: No. 8 UCLA is putting on a performance this season that would make both Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde proud. Fresh off an upset of No. 1 BYU, the Bruins lost to UC San Diego for the first time ever Friday, losing the match in five sets. UCLA had won 44 in a row over the Tritons. Then on Saturday, the Bruins stopped No. 3 Long Beach State in four games and snapped a five-game losing streak at the Walter Pyramid, led by 6-9 hitter Sean O’Malley with 19 kills.

>> This week: The Bruins are now 15-11 overall and 10-8 in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, residing in fifth place. UCLA will play UC Santa Barbara in Pauley Pavilion on Wednesday and then face MPSF leader Cal State Northridge on Friday, also in Pauley.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: UCLA senior Lindsey Pluimer was named to the Pac-10 All-Academic Team for the third year in a row. In addition to being an All-Conference first-team selection on the court, she was honored for her 3.71 grade-point average in Communications Studies. Sophomore guard Erica Tukiainen received honorable mention.

Women’s Golf:

>> This week: The second-ranked Bruins head back into action this week in the PING/ASU Sun Devil Invitational in Tempe on Friday. It’s their last tournament before the Pac-10 Championships on April 21-23.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: Defending champion UCLA finished third in the Pac-10 Conference Championships in Seattle, finishing behind Stanford and Oregon State after a fall on the final rotation of the meet. Tasha Schwikert was UCLA’s only individual winner, taking her seventh career Pac-10 title, with a share of the uneven bars title with a 9.95.

>> This week: The Bruins are off; next up is the NCAA Regionals on April 12.

>> Of note: Freshman Brittani McCullough, whose season ended due to injury back on March 9, was named Pac-10 Freshman/Newcomer of the Year. Four Bruins were named to the Pac-10 All-Academic team, including juniors Ariana Berlin and Kristina Comforte and senior Tasha Schwikert on the second team, and senior Natalie Padilla as honorable mention.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: Ten Bruins were named to the Pac-10 All-Academic teams, including first-team selections Tess Schofield (Communication Studies, 3.83 grade-point average) and Katherine Wong (History, 3.72). All-American Nicolette Teo (Anthropology, 3.58), Ellen Brooks (Art History, 3.57) and Kristen Fischer (Comm Studies, 3.57) each earned second-team honors. Honorable Mention recognition was given to Shannon Hackett, Brittany Hill, Julie Imagane, Marisa Samaniego and Chiemi Yamamoto.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: Eighth-ranked UCLA had a good week, blanking Hawaii in Honolulu, 7-0 on Tuesday and then starting Pac-10 play with a 7-0 whitewash of Oregon on Saturday at the Los Angeles Tennis Center. It was Bruin Coach Stella Sampras Webster’s 200th career win in her 12 seasons in Westwood (200-102).

>> This week: The Bruins are now 14-4 and head north for matches with No. 7 California in Berkeley in Friday and fifth-ranked Stanford in Palo Alto on Saturday.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: The Bruins were ranked sixth in the nation in the coaches’ pre-season poll and finished second at the Cal/Nevada Championships in Fresno. The Bruins had three winners over the two-day event, including freshman Lindsay Rowe in the 100 m hurdles in a lifetime best of 13.74, senior high jumper Allie Miller (5-7) and the 4 x 400 m relay team of Chanelle Curry, Krystin Lacy, Ashlea McLaughlin and Nicole Leach (3:39.30).

>> This week: The Bruins will send some athletes to the Stanford Invitational.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1 UCLA scored an impressive 9-3 win over Hawaii in Honolulu on Saturday, led by Courtney Mathewson’s three-goal performance. The Bruins are now 22-0 on the season and 8-0 in Mountain Pacific Sports Federation play.

>> This week: UCLA will entertain California at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center on Friday, followed by a match with Pacific on Saturday, both starting at 1 p.m.

 

Sunday syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

The men’s basketball team won a thrilling NCAA second round game Saturday to highlight and otherwise quiet Finals Week for most Bruin teams. Almost everyone is back in action this week, however, and the football team got good news as the NCAA approved the petitions of three players for additional eligibility.

Baseball:

>> Last week: The Bruins had most of the week off and probably wished they had the whole week off. UCLA lost all three games against No. 7 Long Beach State, starting with a 13-3 drubbing at Jackie Robinson Stadium on Friday (Tim Murphy took the loss, now 2-1, despite nine strikeouts in five innings). On Saturday, the Bruins lost a doubleheader at Blair Field in Long Beach, leading into the ninth inning of the first game, 2-0, before losing 3-2. Charles Brewer (2-2) took the loss, giving up all three runs in the bottom of the ninth. In the nightcap, Long Beach State (16-3) eased past the Bruins, 10-3, as Gavin Brooks (1-1) took the loss.

>> This week: UCLA is now 10-8 and has four games on the road this week. The Bruins play at San Diego State on Tuesday and then play a three-game series in Arizona against the Wildcats on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Football:

>> Last week: The NCAA approved the petitions of wide receivers Marcus Everett and Gavin Ketchum and defensive tackle Brigham Harwell for an additional year of eligibility. The NCAA did not approve Michael Pitre’s petition, and he has signed with an agent and will try to sign with a professional football team.

Rowing:

>> This week: The Bruins are back in action at the Windermere Stanford regatta this Saturday and Sunday. UCLA is undefeated thus far in the spring, winning against Loyola Marymount and San Diego State.

Softball:

>> This week: UCLA is ranked second in the country and will be back in action Tuesday in Santa Barbara with a doubleheader against the Gauchos beginning at 1 p.m. UCLA will then start Pac-10 play this weekend in Oregon, taking on Oregon State on Friday and the Oregon Ducks on Saturday and Sunday, all at Easton Stadium on campus.

Track & Field:

>> This week: Both the men’s and women’s teams will be at the Cal/Nevada Championships in Fresno this weekend Friday and Saturday.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins set a school record for wins with first- and second-round NCAA Tournament wins in Anaheim over Mississippi Valley State, 70-29, on Thursday and Texas A&M, 53-49, on Saturday. UCLA is now 33-3 on the season, the most victories ever for a Bruin basketball team. Guard Darren Collison led UCLA with 21 points Saturday and scored the winning basket on a drive in the final minute.

>> This week: Top-seeded UCLA marches on to the West Regional in Phoenix, where the Bruins will face 12th-seeded Western Kentucky (29-6) on Thursday. If UCLA should win that game, it will play in the regional final Saturday against either third-seed Xavier (29-6) or seventh-seed West Virginia (26-10).

Men’s Golf:

>> This week: The fourth-ranked Bruins will be in action this week in Alpharetta, Ga., at the U.S. Collegiate Championship on Monday through Wednesday with No. 2 Georgia, No. 3 Charlotte and No. 5 Oklahoma State in the field. On Friday, the Bruins will have a one-day dual match against Coastal Carolina.

Men’s Tennis:

>> This week: The Bruins are 12-1, have won six in a row and are ranked sixth in the nation. Their next match is against Loyola Marymount at the Los Angeles Tennis Center on Tuesday, starting at 2 p.m. They will head to the Northwest this weekend for matches against Washington in Seattle on Friday and Oregon in Eugene on Saturday.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> This week: Ninth-ranked UCLA is now 14-10 after upsetting No. 1 BYU in its last match on March 12. The Bruins return to action Friday against UC San Diego on the road, followed by a trip to Long Beach State to face the 49ers on Saturday at the Walter Pyramid. UCLA defeated UCSD in the only meetings between the teams, and the Bruins are 1-1 this season against the 49ers.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> This week: The Bruins will be in action at the Pacific-10 Championships in Seattle on Saturday and could contend for the crown depending on team health. Despite injuries, UCLA has beaten conference opponents Arizona, California, Stanford, Oregon State and Washington so far this season.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: The Bruins finished their 2008 season 31st in the nation in the NCAA Championships in Columbus, Ohio. Senior Nicolette Teo earned All-America honors with a seventh-place finish in the 100 m Breast, then came back to finish 12th in the 200m Breast and win Honorable Mention All-America honors in that event. Junior Anna Poteete was 27th in the 100 free and set a new school record of 49.23.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: Although the Bruin team was off, senior Riza Zalameda was honored as the Pac-10 Player of the Week for March 10-16. Zalameda is ranked seventh in the nation, nearly made the field for the Pacific Life Open and then helped the Bruins smash USC, 6-1. It’s the third time in her career that she’s been selected as Pac-10 Player of the Week.

>> This week: The eighth-ranked Bruins (12-4) are back in action Tuesday at Hawaii and then return to face Oregon on Saturday at noon at the Los Angeles Tennis Center on campus.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: Senior Courtney Mathewson was named Mountain Pacific Sports Federation co-Player of the Week for her four goals that helped UCLA to an 8-7 win over third-ranked USC on March 14. She has scored at least one goal in each of UCLA’s last 11 matches.

>> This week: No. 1 UCLA (21-0) is in Hawaii this week and will play an exhibition game with the Canadian national team on Wednesday in Honolulu and then face Hawaii on Friday.

 

Sunday syllabus: The week that was and the week ahead

A very big week in Bruin basketball, but there was torrid action on the diamond, the mat, the track and much more:

Baseball:

>> Last week: The Bruins started the week with a 4-2 loss to St. Mary’s last Sunday (Matt Drummond took the loss, 0-1), but won that series, 2-1. On Tuesday, DH Cody Decker, second baseman Alden Carrithers and right fielder Gabe Cohen all hit home runs in an 11-3 win over Pepperdine with Justin Uribe (2-0) scattering three hits in five shutout innings. UCLA finished the week with a 3-2 record by taking two of three at Cal Poly San Luis Osbispo. The Bruins lost the opener on Thursday, 9-8, with reliever Brendan Lafferty (1-1) taking the loss as the Mustangs scored two in the bottom of the ninth for the win. CP/SLO went up 5-0 in Friday’s game, but Charles Brewer (2-1) came in with none out in the first inning and gave up just one run the rest of the way to earn the win as the Bruins came back for a 10-6 victory, including a seven-run seventh inning. On Saturday, Carrithers went 4-6 and led the Bruins to a 12-9 win (he was 10-17 in the series and has a .444 average on the season). Third baseman Jermaine Curtis had a home run and four runs batted in for UCLA, and Gavin Brooks (1-0) got the win and Lafferty recorded a save.

>> This week: No. 11 UCLA (10-5) is off for winter-quarter final exams until Friday, when they take on Long Beach State at Jackie Robinson Stadium at 6 p.m. and then have a doubleheader scheduled at Long Beach State on Saturday.

Football:

>> Last week: UCLA held its annual "Pro Day" on Thursday with more than 30 NFL scouts at Spaulding Field to watch Bruin seniors and former Bruin Junior Taylor work out.

Softball:

>> Last week: UCLA rose to No. 2 in the national rankings, but fell to Cal State Fullerton at Easton Stadium on campus last Wednesday, 1-0, in eight innings despite nine strikeouts from Anjelica Selden (12-2). With the game at 0-0 through seven innings, the international tiebreaker was used, with a runner placed on second base to start the inning. Fullerton managed a run and Selden saw her scoreless innings streak end at 33 2/3 and UCLA’s win streak at 19. The Bruins eased past Cal State Northridge on Thursday, 7-0, behind a one-hitter from Donna Kerr (10-1) with relief help from Megan Langenfeld. Junior second baseman Amanda Kamekona hit two home runs for the Bruins and Langenfeld added a third.

>> This week: The Bruins take a break for finals with a glossy mark of 26-3 and will start up again at UC Santa Barbara on March 25.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins (31-3) added to their Pac-10 Conference regular-season crown with UCLA’s third-ever victory in the Pac-10 Conference Tournament at Staples Center. After the thrilling, last-second win over Cal in Pauley Pavilion on March 8, UCLA left no doubt on Thursday with an 88-66 rout of the Bears in the quarterfinals, then skated past USC, 57-54 on Friday night (Kevin Love, 19 points and 10 rebounds) and edged Stanford, 67-64, thanks to a 22-8 run in the second half and brilliant play from Darren Collison, who scored 28 points and was named Most Outstanding Player in the tournament. Love was chosen to the All-Tournament Team.

>> This week: The second-ranked Bruins, riding a 10-game winning streak, will find out today who they will play in the NCAA Tournament, almost certainly as a No. 1 seed and in games to be held in Anaheim at the Honda Center on Thursday and, if they win, on Saturday.

>> Of note I: UCLA suffered a loss on Friday, when forward Luc Richard Mbah a Moute sprained his left ankle again in the first half. X-rays showed no break in the leg and he was on crutches and wearing a walking boot on his left foot during Saturday’s game.

>> Of note II: Current and former Bruins were honored this week, as Love was selected as a first-team All-American by Sports Illustrated, ESPN and Sporting News. ESPN also completed the release of its list of the best college basketball players of all time, with former Bruins Lew Alcindor (now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton ranking first and third.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: No. 3 UCLA finished fifth in the Southern Highlands Collegiates in Las Vegas last Sunday, 12 shots behind host UNLV. Junior Erik Flores tied for fourth overall.

>> This week: The Bruin Blue Team (second squad) will be in Bakersfield on Monday and Tuesday for the second Cal State Bakersfield Spring Invite.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: No. 6 UCLA had a good week, edging No. 11 Baylor, 4-3, on Monday and hammering Duke 6-1 on Saturday. The Bruins are now 12-1 overall and will take the next two weeks off for finals and spring break.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: The Bruins had a strong showing at the NCAA Indoor Championships in Fayetteville, Arkansas as eight men earned All-American honors. The highlight was the shot put, in which John Caulfield finished fourth (62-2 1/4) and Darius Savage finished sixth with a lifetime best of 61-0 1/4. Dustin Leo finished tied for seventh in the pole vault (17-4 1/2) and Boldizsar Kocsor was seventh in the weight throw with a personal best of 70-1 1/2. On the track, the distance medley team of Marlon Patterson (1200 m), Elijah Wells (400 m), Cory Primm (800 m) and Laef Barnes (1600 m) was seventh in 9:35.74 and as a team, UCLA was 14th with 13 1/2 points.

>> This week: There is a decathlon-heptathlon meet at CSUN on Thursay and Friday as most of the team is off for finals.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: No. 9 UCLA has been wandering inconsistently through the season but had an opportunity to measure itself on Thursday and Friday against No. 1 BYU (17-2) in back-to-back matches in Pauley Pavilion. The Bruins were swept, 30-25, 30-27, 30-27, on Thursday but came back to upset the Cougars on Friday, 30-28, 23-30, 30-23, 30-21. Sean O’Malley had 19 kills in the win and sophomore setter Kevin Ker entered the match in the second game and had 39 assists.

>> This week: UCLA is now 14-10 overall and 9-7 in Mountain Pacific Sports Federation play and will take a week off for exams.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: After 15 seasons as Bruin head coach, Kathy Olivier resigned last Tuesday. She compiled a 232-208 record, her 1999 team was Pac-10 co-champion, and the 2006 team won the Pac-10 Tournament. Olivier will remain with the athletic department in another capacity, and a search has begun for a new coach.

>> Of note: In addition to the selection of senior Lindsey Pluimer to the All-Pac-10 team, junior guard Tierra Henderson was named to the first-ever Pac-10 All-Defensive team and guard Doreena Campbell was named to the All-Freshmen team and was honorable mention for the All-Pac-10 team. In addition, freshmen Regina Rogers, Nina Earl and Darxia Morris earned honorable mention for the All-Freshman squad.

Women’s Golf:

>> Last week: The second-ranked golfers made a charge during the final round of the UCF Invitational in Orlando, Fla., to finish third overall, 12 strokes behind winner Duke. Freshman Maria Jose Uribe finished seventh overall and All-American Tiffany Joh placed in a tie for 10th.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: The Bruins had to battle tornado warnings in addition to the No. 1-ranked Georgia Gym Dogs on Saturday in Athens, but lost, 197.900-196.925, despite compiling their best score of the season. Prior to leaving for Stegeman Coliseum, the Bruins had to be moved to the basement of their hotel twice for precautionary reasons due to the weather. Once on the floor, however, four Bruins recorded career-best or tied their career-best marks: Ashley Jenkins, 9.9 on floor; Jordan Schwikert, 9.925 on floor [tied career best]; Kristina Comforte, 9.9 on vault [tied career best] and Mizuki Sato, 9.875 on floor.

>> This week: The 10th-ranked Bruins (14-4) have the week off before the Pac-10 Championships in Seattle on March 29.

Women’s Rowing:

>> Last week: The Bruins took three of four races against San Diego State at Ballona Creek, winning both of the varsity eight races and the varsity four race while dropping the novice race.

>> This week: The Bruins are off until the Windemere Stanford regatta on March 29-30.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: Junior All-American Marisa Samaniego got off to bad start at the NCAA Zone E Diving Championships in Oklahoma City on Thursday when she slipped off the one-meter board and withdrew. But she rebounded on Friday to win on the three-meter board and earn a spot at next week's NCAA Championships. In the tower competition, junior Tess Schofield finished sixth and freshman Morgan Erpenbeck was eighth, but only the top two qualified for the NCAA meet.

>> This week: The Bruins will send three swimmers and one diver to the NCAA Swimming & Diving Championships in Columbus, Ohio, from Thursday to Sunday.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The 10th-ranked Bruins smashed eighth-ranked USC at Marks Tennis Stadium, 6-1, on Thursday in its best performance of the season. Riza Zalameda, Tracy Lin, Andrea Remynse, Yasmin Schnack and Ashley Joelson all recorded singles wins.

>> This week: The Bruins are 12-4 on the season and are off until March 25 at Hawaii.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: UCLA sent only freshman vaulter Tori Anthony to the NCAA Indoor Championships, but she came back with All-American honors for finishing in a tie for eighth at 13-5 1/4.

>> This week: There is a meet for heptathletes at Northridge on Thursday and Friday, but most of the team is off this week.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1-ranked UCLA needed all four goals scored by senior Courtney Mathewson to edge No. 3 USC, 8-7, on Friday at the McDonald’s Swim Stadium at USC. The Bruins are now 21-0 and 7-0 in Pac-10 play and snapped a 42-match home win streak for the Trojans. UCLA’s own win streak now stands at 29. Mathewson scored the game-winner with 2:31 to play in the match.

>> This week: The Bruins are off until March 26.

 

Sunday syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

Amid the celebration of another Bruin Pac-10 men’s basketball championship were some outstanding performances in some other sports:

Baseball:

>> Last week: The third-ranked Bruins had a busy week, starting with the final game of the Urban Invitational last Sunday. UCLA defeated USC, 4-3, on second baseman Alden Carrithers’ two-run double in the eighth inning; lefty Brendan Lafferty (1-0) earned the win with five innings of shutout relief. On Tuesday and Wednesday, UCLA was pummeled twice by traditional power Cal State Fullerton, 7-1 in Fullerton and 13-2 at Jackie Robinson Stadium. On Friday and Saturday, the Bruins managed home victories against St. Mary’s, 14-0 (Tim Murphy, 2-0, allowed one hit in seven innings) and 7-6 on Ryan Babineau’s pinch-hit, two-run double in the seventh inning as freshman Dan Klein (2-2) got the win.

>> This week: The 7-3 Bruins played St. Mary’s this afternoon at Jackie Robinson Stadium, then will play Pepperdine Tuesday at 6 p.m. at Jackie Robinson and finish the week with a three-game series at Cal State San Luis Obispo from Thursday through Saturday.

>> Of note: Bruin ace Murphy was named Pac-10 Pitcher of the Week last Tuesday for his 11 shutout innings the previous week, including a complete game shutout of Bethune-Cookman in the Urban Invitational. Also, Jackie Robinson, whose worst of four sports at UCLA was baseball, was voted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame last week.

Football:

>> Last week: With the coaching staff in place, the Bruins welcomed about 20 high school seniors-to-be on the first of two "Junior Days" on campus. Recruits took a tour and attended the UCLA-California basketball game. A second Junior Day will be held in April when spring practice is underway.

Rowing:

>> Last week: UCLA swept all four races from Loyola Marymount on Saturday at Ballona Creek.

>> This week: San Diego State will row against the Bruins at Ballona Creek on Saturday morning.

Softball:

>> Last week: The Bruins are now ranked second in the nation and are mowing down opponents in bunches. On Wednesday, Angelica Selden struck out 13 and soph Julie Burney hit a run-scoring single in the fifth that led to a 1-0 UCLA win. Then the Bruins ran off five straight wins in the Long Beach Invitational, starting with victories against Virginia Tech, 1-0 (Selden a one-hitter), and Notre Dame, 3-2 (second baseman GiOnna DiSalvatore drove in all three runs), on Friday. Yesterday, UCLA hammered Rutgers, 9-0 (Megan Langenfeld now 3-0), and shut down No. 8 Northwestern, 2-0 as Donna Kerr struck out 15 to go to 9-1 on the season; Langenfeld hit a two-run homer in the fourth. Today, Selden (12-1) struck out 11 and ran her scoreless streak to 26 innings in a 1-0 win over Long Beach State as right fielder Samantha Camuso doubled in pinch-runner Grace Murray in the bottom of the eighth.

>> This week: The Bruins are now a dazzling 25-2 on the season and have won 19 straight. UCLA has games with Cal State Fullerton and Cal State Northridge at home on Wednesday (2 p.m.) and Thursday (1 p.m.) before taking a 12-day break for final exams.

>> Of note: Freshman Kerr was named Pac-10 Pitcher of the Week for three wins and a perfect game against St. Peter’s last Sunday.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins (28-3), ranked No. 2 in one poll and No. 3 in another, made miraculous comebacks to defeat Stanford and California and finish the season as Pac-10 champions. Against Stanford, UCLA trailed by 14 points moments into the second half, but came back to tie the game at 63-63 in regulation and won, 77-67, in overtime to clinch the conference title. On Saturday, the Bruins were down, 37-30, at halftime, but stormed back with 51 points to win, 81-80, on a circus shot by Josh Shipp that appeared to loop over the backboard and through the basket with 1.5 seconds left.

>> This week: UCLA is the No. 1 seed in the Pac-10 Tournament starting Wednesday. The Bruins will play the winner of the California-Washington game Thursday about 2:30 p.m. The semifinals will be held Friday and the championship game Saturday. The NCAA Tournament brackets will be announced next Sunday.

>> Of note: Freshman center Kevin Love was selected as one of 10 candidates for the Oscar Robertson Award, the player of the year trophy handed out by the U.S. Basketball Writers Assn. The winner will be announced during the Final Four weekend in San Antonio.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: The UCLA "Blue Team" (second squad) finished 13th in the USC Collegiate Invitational on Monday and Tuesday. The full team participated in the Southern Highlands Collegiate Tournament in Las Vegas on Friday, Saturday andSunday and was in sixth place through two rounds, 11 behind Georgia.

>> This week: Third-ranked UCLA finishes up in Las Vegas today, then is off for a couple of weeks. The Blue Team will return to Bakersfield for the second Cal State Bakersfield Spring Invitational on March 17-18.

>> Of note: Senior Kevin Chappell, who won the PING Intercollegiates in Arizona early in the year, was named Pac-10 Golfer of the Month for the January/February period.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The sixth-ranked Bruins (10-1) had a good week, starting with a 7-0 shutout of Rice at home Wednesday, then defeating No. 10 USC, 5-2, at the Los Angeles Tennis Center on campus Thursday. The match was tied, 2-2, but the Bruins won the last three individual matches as Jeremy Drean and Nick Meister won in straight sets in the No. 5 and No. 6 singles slots and Michael Look won in three sets in the No. 4 spot.

>> This week: The Bruins will make up a rained-out match with Baylor on Monday at 1:30 p.m. and then take on Duke on Wednesday, also at 1:30 p.m. with both matches at the Los Angeles Tennis Center.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: Shotputter Darius Savage improved his lifetime best to 60-10 to win the Last Chance Indoor qualifying meet in Seattle on Saturday. At Drake Stadium, most of the UCLA team competed in the UCLA Invitational on Saturday afternoon. Bruin athletes scored eight event wins, including Brandon Smith in the 200 m (21.30), Elijah Wells in the 400m (48.01), Laef Barnes in the 800m (1:51.62, a lifetime best), Spencer Knight in the 1500m (3:55.98), Taylor Hobson in the high jump (6-8) and long jump (23-9 1/2, a lifetime best) plus John Caulfield in the discus (189-4).

>> This week: UCLA will send up to seven entries to the NCAA Indoor Championships this week in Fayetteville, Ark. Other athletes will compete in the CSUN Invitational in Northridge.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: UCLA stopped its four-match losing streak with a four-set win over Lewis at Pauley Pavilion last Tuesday and then defeated the second-ranked Division III team, UC Santa Cruz in four games at home on Wednesday. Much more impressive, however, was a five-set win over No. 6 UC Irvine at the Bren Center in Irvine on Friday night. Attackers Garrett Muagututia and Sean O’Malley each had 20 kills.

>> This week: The 10th-ranked Bruins are now 13-9 overall and 8-6 in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation. Second-ranked BYU (16-1), the MPSF leader at 11-1, comes to Pauley Pavilion for matches Thursday and Friday, both starting at 7 p.m., in a test of just how good the Bruins really are.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: Mirroring their inconsistent play this season, the Bruins stunned USC, 73-52, in the first round of the Pac-10 Tournament in San Jose. Freshman Darxia Morris led UCLA with 19 points as the Bruins defeated USC for the only time in their three meetings this season. In the semifinals today against Stanford, however, the Bruins were throttled, 78-45, in a game that was not as close as the final score indicated.

>> This week: UCLA finished the season at 16-15 and does not appear to be in line to be invited to the NCAA Tournament. UCLA essentially played freshmen and sophomores and senior forward Lindsay Pluimer this season and could be a promising team next season. Let’s emphasize the "could be."

>> Of note: Pluimer finished her Bruin regular season career today by scoring eight points and grabbing eight rebounds. She is ranked 12th on the all-time UCLA scoring list (1,558), 10th on the rebound list (737), sixth on the blocked shot list, seventh in three-point shots made and tied for third in most double figure points game in a career. Pluimer started her 123rd consecutive game today, which is the most in the UCLA women's NCAA era and third on the all-time school list. She was named the Toyo Tires Pac-10 Women's Basketball Scholar-Athlete of the Year.

Women’s Golf:

>> This week: UCLA is ranked second nationally and is in Sorrento, Fla., for the UCF Invitational that runs today through Tuesday. It will be the Bruins’ last tournament until April 4.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: The Bruins zipped past Oregon State at home Sunday, March 1, 196.775-195.950 at Pauley Pavilion, even without all-around star Anna Li to improve to 13-1 overall and finished Pac-10 competition with a 6-0 mark.

>> This week: The Bruins are competing today in Pauley Pavilion in a quadrangular meet with Alabama, Arkansas and Cal State Fullerton, but will face a stiff test next Saturday on the road against NCAA favorite Georgia in Athens beginning at 4:30 p.m. Pacific time.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: UCLA Coach Cyndi Gallgher indicated that although 16 Bruin swimmers posted marks that would qualify them for the NCAA Championships in Columbus, Ohio, from March 20-22, only three or four of the qualifiers will go. The others simply have no realistic chance to score points in a fast year thanks to the upcoming 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Junior Anna Poteete (sprint free), senior Nicolette Teo (breast) and freshman Lauren Hall (400 medley) all have automatic qualifying marks in their respective events and freshman Dani Milligan could be invited since her 400 medley mark is just 0.01 seconds shy of the automatic mark.

>> This week: The NCAA Zone E qualifying meet for divers will be held in Oklahoma City from March 13 through 15 and the Bruins could add additional qualifiers.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: Ninth-ranked UCLA showed why this week with wins over Washington State on Friday and Washington on Saturday, both by 7-0 scores. The Bruins are 11-4 overall and 2-0 in Pac-10 play.

>> This week: UCLA will face No. 9 USC across town Thursday at 1:30 p.m. before taking a 12-day break for final exams.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: Freshman Tori Anthony won the pole vault in the Last Chance Qualifier meet in Seattle with a jump of 13 feet 7 inches and will compete in the NCAA Indoor Championships in Fayetteville, Ark., next week. At Drake Stadium, Bruin women won seven events and two relays at the UCLA Invitational on Saturday. UCLA teams won the 4x100m (46.16) and 4x400 m (3:44.58) events and individual winners included Nicole Leach in the 800m (2:09.61), Clare Rethmeier in the two mile (10:41.59), Lindsay Rowe in the 100m hurdles (14.06), Chanelle Curry in the 400m hurdles (1:03.56), jump star Rhonda Watkins at 20-11 3/4 in the long jump and 41-9 3/4 in the triple jump and Tara Ross in the javelin (a lifetime best of 162-9).

>> This week: Anthony will be at the NCAA Indoor Championships and other Bruins will compete at the CSUN Invitational.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1 UCLA maintained its perfect record with a 9-7 win over No. 2 Stanford at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center on Saturday. Senior Brittany Rowe had three goals to lead the Bruins in scoring. Today, the Bruins eased past No. 8 San Jose State, 15-5, also at the Sunset Canyon Rec Center.

>> This week: UCLA (20-0) will face another challenge from a top-five team, playing USC across town on Friday, March 14, at 5 p.m. The Bruins will take a break after that for final exams.

 

Sunday Syllabus: The week that was and the week ahead

At one point during the week, UCLA had 10 teams ranked in the top 10 in the nation. For any program anywhere, that’s pretty remarkable.

Another area where UCLA is No. 1: applications for admission. UCLA was once again the most popular university in America by number of applications, with a staggering 55,369 received, an increase of 9% over the nation-leading 2007 figure. Even more unbelievable: the percentage of freshman applicants with a grade-point average of 4.0 of better: 44.6%.

Oh, yes, the Pac-10 men’s basketball title will be decided this week.

Baseball:

>> Last week: The third-ranked Bruins are now 4-1 after defeating Southern, 11-2 on Friday and Bethune Cookman, 2-0, before a national television audience on ESPN2 last night in the Urban Invitational. Left-hander Tim Murphy scattered seven hits for UCLA’s first complete-game shutout since 2005. Earlier in the week, UCLA was crushing Cal State Northridge on Tuesday, 22-2, when the game was halted due to darknesss; it will be completed on April 15. The Bruins also outlasted UC Santa Barbara, 5-4, in 13 innings at Jackie Robinson Stadium on Wednesday.

>> This week: UCLA finishes up the round-robin Urban Invitational today at USC at 2 p.m. The Bruins have a home-and-home with powerful Cal State Fullerton at Fullerton on Tuesday (6 p.m.) and at Jackie Robinson Stadium on Wednesday (6 p.m.). The Bruins will host St. Mary’s at Jackie Robinson Stadium for a three-game series from Friday-Sunday.

Rowing:

>> This week: The spring season starts on Saturday with the Bruins hosting Loyola Marymount on March 8.

Softball:

>> Last week: The Bruins are up to No. 4 in the national rankings and continue hot at the San Diego Classic. UCLA defeated James Madison, 8-0, in their opener on Friday (Anjelica Selden, 14 strikeouts) and then hammered San Diego, 10-0, behind Donna Kerr’s 11 strikeouts (she’s 7-1), in the nightcap. Soph Megan Langenfeld tossed a one-hitter on Saturday morning as UCLA stomped Eastern Michigan, 8-0, and Selden (9-1) pitched all nine innings (with 13 strikeouts) of a tight 2-1 win over No. 20 San Diego State in the afternoon. Selden, a senior, became only the 21st pitcher in NCAA history to record 1,200 or more strikeouts. Earlier in the week, UCLA shut out Cal State Bakersfield on Wednesday, 3-0, with Kerr pitching four innings and Langenfeld finishing the final three frames.

>> This week: The Bruins (18-2) have won 12 straight games and finish in San Diego with a game against St. Peter’s today, then have UNLV at home on Wednesday (1 p.m.) before heading south for the Long Beach Invitational against Virginia Tech and Notre Dame on Friday, Rutgers on Saturday and highly-ranked Northwestern and Long Beach State on Sunday.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: UCLA (25-3 overall, 13-2 in the Pac-10) defeated Arizona State on the road on Thursday, 70-49, breaking open a close game late in the first half to post its biggest-ever margin of victory in Tempe. The previous high was 20 from a 99-79 win way back in 1956.

>> This week: Fourth-ranked UCLA could move up in the polls again this week if the Bruins can post a victory against Arizona (17-11, 7-8) in Tucson. The game will be nationally televised on CBS and begin at 1 p.m. On Thursday comes the Pac-10 regular-season title decider with Stanford (24-4, 13-3) at Pauley Pavilion at 8 p.m. and the regular-season finale at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday against California. The 1968 NCAA championship team, arguably the greatest college basketball team of all time that started Lew Alcindor, Lynn Shackelford, Mike Lynn, Lucius Allen and Mike Warren, will be honored at halftime of the Cal game.

>> Of note: If Alcindor had not suffered an eye injury that led to UCLA’s 71-69 loss at the Astrodome to Houston, the Bruins would have finished the 1967-68 season with a then-record of 64 wins in a row. UCLA won its first 25 games of Alcindor’s senior season, so UCLA would have had a streak of 89 straight wins before USC won the first game ever by an opponent in Pauley Pavilion, 46-44, on March 8, 1969. The current record is 88, set by the 1971-1974 teams.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: The Bruin "Blue Team" (second squad) finished second this week at the Cal State Bakersfield Spring Invitational, one shot behind Cal State Stanislaus. Junior Erik Flores was the tournament champion, carding a 10-under 206 for the three rounds, one shot ahead of fellow Bruin Craig Leslie.

>> This week: The Blue Team is in action against at the USC Invitational at North Hills Country Club on Monday and Tuesday. The whole squad will be back in action on Friday through Sunday in Las Vegas for the Southern Highlands Invitational.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: Sixth-ranked UCLA (8-1) stomped UC Santa Barbara at home on Wednesday and two doubles teams reached the quarterfinals of the Pacific Coast Doubles Championships. Mathieu Dehaine and Holden Seguso were seeded seventh and fourth-seeded Nick Meister and Harel Srugo both reached the round of eight before being defeated.

>> This week: The Bruins are in action again on Wednesday, hosting No. 24 Rice on Wednesday and seventh-ranked USC on Thursday, both at the Los Angeles Tennis Center beginning at 1:30 p.m.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: UCLA finished sixth in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Indoor Championships in Seattle. The Bruins’ only individual champion was junior Boldizsar Kocsor, who won the weight throw at 69-9 1/2.

>> This week: The Bruins will open their 2008 outdoor season at the UCLA Invitational at Drake Stadium. Field events will start at 10 a.m.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: Seventh-ranked UCLA is happy to be coming home after dropping both matches this weekend to Ball State in Muncie, Indiana. The Bruins (10-9) lost in four sets on Friday night and were swept on Saturday, losing their fourth straight match and five of six on their lengthy road trip.

>> This week: UCLA plays in Pauley Pavilion for the first time since Feb. 9 on Tuesday night with a match against Lewis at 7 p.m. and follows up with UC Santa Cruz on Wednesday evening. UCLA heads south to play at UC Irvine on Friday evening; all three matches begin at 7 p.m.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: UCLA closed out the regular season with a split at home, losing to Arizona State, 73-67, and then defeating Arizona, 80-70. Lindsay Pluimer, the lone Bruin senior, led the team once again with 18 points and 11 rebounds. UCLA ended the regular season with a 15-14 record and was 10-8 (tied for fourth) in the Pac-10, sliding to a 4-5 mark in the second half of the league schedule after a 6-3 first round.

>> This week: The Pac-10 Tournament is on in San Jose and the fifth-seeded Bruins will play fourth-seed USC in its first-round game on Saturday at 7:15 p.m. UCLA lost both games to USC this season, by eight points at the Galen Center and by 13 at home.

Women’s Golf:

>> Last week: The No. 1-ranked Bruins fell victim to high winds that negated strong efforts in rounds one and three at the Arizona Wildcat Invitational and finished sixth overall. Their best individual performance by All-American Tiffany Joh. She overcame an 80 in the second round to shoot a two-under 70 in the final round and finish fifth overall.

>> This week: UCLA is off to Orlando, Florida to play in the UCF Challenge on Sunday, March 9 through Tuesday, March 11.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: UCLA (12-1) lost to No. 2 Utah last Sunday and suffered injuries to all-around stars Anna Li and Brittani McCullough, both of whom had concussions.

>> This week: The Bruins are ranked ninth in the country and will take on No. 10 Oregon State (8-1) today at Pauley Pavilion, beginning at 2 p.m. UCLA will webcast the meet on uclabruins.com, with Darren Preston and former U.S. Olympian and NCAA champion Steve McCain on the call. Sunday's meet is UCLA's Second Annual Breast Cancer Awareness meet and the Bruins will wear leotards with pink accents and pink ribbons. All fans are encouraged to wear pink, and pink wristbands will be given away to all attendees. Pink Crocs will also be given away to 30 lucky fans.

>> Of note: UCLA will have its last home meet of the season in a quadrangular on Sunday, March 9, with Alabama, Arkansas and Cal State Fullerton.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: The Bruins are ranked 15th in the nation and finished fourth in the Pac-10 Swimming & Diving Championships, held in Long Beach (swimming) and Federal Way, Washington (diving). Competing with a young team, the Bruins set more than a dozen lifetime bests and set a school record 7:14.73 in the 4 x 200 m Freestyle Relay on Wednesday with freshmen Lauren Hall, Alex Sullivan and Emily Bibb plus junior Anna Poteete.

>> This week: UCLA is off until the NCAA Zone E meet in Oklahoma City on March 13-15.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The Bruins came into the week ranked 11th in the nation, but dropped Wednesday’s match to No. 4 Baylor, 5-2, at the Los Angeles Tennis Center, and then upset No. 6 Stanford on Friday, 4-3. Senior Tracy Lin upset ninth-ranked Jessica Nguyen of Stanford to clinch the win. UCLA didn’t fare as well on Saturday, losing to No. 8 California, 4-3, despite an upset win by 10th-ranked Riza Zalameda over seventh-ranked Susie Babos in three sets.

>> This week: UCLA is 9-4 and hosts Washington State on Friday (1:30 p.m.) and Washington on Saturday (11 a.m.) at the Los Angeles Tennis Center.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: UCLA took only its vaulters and middle-distance runners to the MPSF Indoor meet in Seattle and placed ninth with 14 1/2 points. Vaulters Ingrid Kantola, Tori Anthony, Kathy Viuf and Megan Jamerson all cleared 13-1 to tie for third place. It was a lifetime best for Jamerson.

>> This week: The Bruins will make one of three appearances in Drake Stadium this season with the UCLA Invitational on Saturday, beginning with field events at 10 a.m.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1-ranked UCLA (18-0) shut out UC Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara on Saturday, 12-0, behind three goals from Brittany Rowe.

>> This week: The competition will be tougher this week as the Bruins host No. 2 Stanford on Saturday at 3 p.m. at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center and then play San Jose State at Sunset Canyon on Sunday at 1 p.m.

 

Weekend warmup: Last turn for Lindsay Pluimer!

Uclablogpixpluimer_lindseya300Bruin teams are in action all over the place this weekend; if you’re in town, you can say goodbye to one of UCLA’s best-ever women’s basketball stars this weekend, senior Lindsay Pluimer (pictured) in her home finales.

Baseball:

>> The Bruins were crushing Cal State Northridge on Tuesday, 22-2, when the game was halted due to darkness; it will be completed April 15. UCLA (2-1) outlasted UC Santa Barbara, 5-4, in 13 innings Wednesday at Jackie Robinson Stadium. On Friday, UCLA will meet Southern University in the inaugural Urban Invitational at 6 p.m. at Jackie Robinson Stadium. The Bruins will then play Bethune-Cookman at the MLB Urban Youth Academy at 5 p.m. Saturday. The academy is at 901 E. Artesia Blvd., Compton. (telephone: [310] 763-3479). The game will be televised nationally on ESPN2. The Bruins will finish the weekend at USC at 1 p.m. Sunday.

Softball:

>> The 14-2 Bruins moved up to No. 4 in the national rankings this week and Anjelica Selden was awarded two National Player of the Week awards and Pac-10 Pitcher of the Week honors for her three-win, 38-strikeout performance at the Palm Springs Classic last weekend. Freshman second baseman Gionna DiSalvatore was named Pac-10 Player of the Week for her 8-12 hitting spree and slugging percentage of 1.250 in Palm Springs. UCLA shut out Cal State Bakersfield on Wednesday, 3-0, with Donna Kerr (6-1) pitching four innings and Megan Langenfeld finishing the final three frames. This weekend, UCLA plays in the San Diego Classic against James Madison (2 p.m.) and San Diego (4:30 p.m.) on Friday at the University of San Diego, against Eastern Michigan (9 a.m.) and San Diego State (2 p.m.) on Saturday at San Diego State and against Saint Peter's at 11:30 a.m. Sunday at USD.

Track and field:

>> The men’s and women’s teams are in Seattle this weekend for the Mountain Pacific Indoor Championships. More important, the Bruins will open their outdoor season March 8 with the UCLA Invitational at Drake Stadium.

Men’s basketball:

>> UCLA (24-3 overall, 12-2 in the Pac-10) is in the Arizona desert trying to hold on to a one-game lead in the Pac-10. The Bruins are ranked fourth in the nation and have a chance to move up after Tennessee’s loss to Vanderbilt this week, but must defeat Arizona State (17-9, 7-7 in Pac-10 play) tonight and Arizona in Tucson at 1 p.m. Sunday. Tonight’s game will be televised locally on FSN Prime Ticket beginning at 7:30 p.m. Sunday’s game is scheduled to start at 1 p.m. Pacific time and will be televised nationally on CBS.

Men’s golf:

>> The Bruin "Blue Team" (second squad) finished second this week at the Cal State Bakersfield Spring Invitational, one shot behind Cal State Stanislaus. Junior Erik Flores was the tournament champion, carding a 10-under 206 for the three rounds, one shot ahead of fellow Bruin Craig Leslie. The Bruins are off this weekend.

Men’s tennis:

>> Sixth-ranked UCLA (8-1) stomped UC Santa Barbara at home Wednesday and will travel to La Jolla this weekend for the 119th Pacific Coast Doubles Championships.

Men’s volleyball:

>> Hoping that a change of scenery will help, slumping —  but still seventh-ranked — UCLA (10-7) is in Muncie, Ind., this week for matches against No. 14 Ball State on Friday and Saturday evenings, both starting at 4:30 p.m. Pacific time. The Cardinals (10-6) have won nine of their last 10. Live audio of the matches can be heard on the BallStateSports.com website.

Women’s basketball:

>> The Bruins (14-13 overall, 9-7 [5th] in Pac-10 play) finish their 2007-08 home schedule with games against Arizona State (18-9, 12-4) tonight at Pauley Pavilion and on Saturday against Arizona (9-18, 3-13) at 11 a.m. Both games will be audiocast on uclabruins.com with Dave Marcus on the play-by-play and Michael Sondheimer as analyst. Saturday’s game also will be available on KTLK-AM (1150). These will be the final home games in the outstanding career of senior Lindsay Pluimer, who ranks sixth in the Pac-10 in scoring (14.5 points per game), eighth in rebounding (6.4 per game) and in the top 10 in six of the 13 individual categories.

Women’s golf:

>> The Bruins are top-ranked, but all bets are off in high winds and strong UCLA efforts in rounds one and three at the Arizona Wildcat Invitational — second-best each day —  was for naught as the second round blew any chance UCLA had for victory. The Bruins finished sixth overall with their best individual performance by All-American Tiffany Joh. She overcame an 80 in the second round to shoot a two-under 70 in the final round and finish fifth overall. UCLA is off until March 9.

Women’s gymnastics:

>> UCLA (12-1) lost to No. 2 Utah last Sunday and suffered injuries to all-around stars Anna Li and Brittani McCullough, both of whom had concussions. The Bruins are, however, ranked ninth in the country and will take on No. 10 Oregon State (8-1) at 2 p.m. Sunday at Pauley Pavilion. UCLA will webcast the meet on uclabruins.com, with Darren Preston and former U.S. Olympian and NCAA champion Steve McCain on the call. Sunday's meet is UCLA's second annual Breast Cancer Awareness meet and the Bruins will wear leotards with pink accents and pink ribbons. All fans are encouraged to wear pink, and pink wristbands will be given away to all attendees. Pink Crocs will also be given away to 30 lucky fans.

Women’s swimming:

>> UCLA is competing in the Pac-10 Swim Championships this week in Long Beach (swimming) and Federal Way, Wash. (diving). Ranked 15th in the nation, the Bruins set a school record 7:14.73 in the 4 x 200 m freestyle relay Wednesday with freshmen Lauren Hall, Alex Sullivan and Emily Bibb plus junior Anna Poteete. The meet continues through Saturday at the Belmont Plaza Pool in Long Beach.

Women’s tennis:

>> The Bruins (8-3) are ranked 11th in the nation, but dropped Wednesday’s match to No. 4 Baylor (10-1), 5-2, at the Los Angeles Tennis Center. UCLA has its hands full this weekend as well, with No. 6 Stanford coming to the LATC at 1:30 p.m. Friday, followed on Saturday by No. 8 California.

Women’s water polo:

>> No. 1-ranked UCLA (17-0) has only one match this week, at UC Santa Barbara, beginning at noon Saturday.

Lindsay Pluimer photo courtesy of UCLA

 

Sunday syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

Uclablogpixpluimer_lindseya300The Bruins and Trojans will be at each other on the hardwood today at the start of a very busy week for the Blue and Gold:

Baseball:

>> Last week: The Bruins held their annual Alumni Day on Saturday with a Legends vs. Alumni game and a six-inning exhibition by the current UCLA team. Junior Tim Murphy and freshman Dan Klein pitched for the two sides and both gave up two runs.

>> This week: UCLA will finally start its 2008 season next Friday at Jackie Robinson Stadium against Oklahoma in a three-game series with games at 6 p.m. (Friday), 3 p.m. (Saturday) and 1 p.m. (Sunday).

>> Of note: Former Bruins Jackie Robinson (1940) and catcher Paul Ellis (1988-90) were placed on the College Baseball Hall of Fame ballot. Robinson became a baseball immortal by breaking the color barrier in 1947, but was only a so-so baseball player in Westwood while excelling in football, basketball and track & field. Ellis was the American Baseball Coaches Assn.’s "Player of the Year" in 1990 for slugging 29 home runs and hitting .360. He set a UCLA record of 83 runs batted in that season.

Football:

>> Last week: The Bruins named Frank Gansz, Jr. as special teams coach and Tim Hauck as secondary coach. Gansz coached NFL special teams for nine seasons and Hauck played safety in the NFL for 13 seasons.

>> This week: Maybe the naming of a wide receivers or tight ends coach?

Softball:

>> Last week: The no. 6 Bruins are in Nevada for the Louisville Slugger Desert Classic and swept the two games on Friday, defeating Missouri, 4-0 (Donna Kerr pitched, now 3-0) and South Carolina, 6-2 (Anjelica Selden now 2-1). UCLA split its two Saturday games, losing to Illinois, 6-2 (Kerr took the loss) but beating Portland State, 7-4 (Selden, 3-1).

>> This week: UCLA (7-2) finishes up in Nevada today with a game against Wisconsin, then travels to Loyola Marymount on Wednesday and heads to another desert for the weekend in the Palm Springs Classic. The Bruins will play Massachusetts and Georgia on Friday, Baylor and Hawaii on Sunday and powerhouse Northwestern on Sunday.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins were off during the week after a difficult 71-61 loss in Seattle to Washington, UCLA’s fourth straight loss at the Bank of America Arena. However, Stanford’s loss to Arizona State on Thursday keeps the Bruins in first place with a 9-2 conference record; the Cardinal is now 10-3.

>> This week: The no. 6 Bruins (21-3) are at USC tonight to try to avenge their 72-63 loss to the Trojans at Pauley Pavilion last month. UCLA comes home to Pauley Pavilion for games against Oregon State on Thursday evening and a nationally-televised game against Oregon next Saturday at 12:30 p.m.

>> Of note: UCLA selected NBBJ Architects as its project architect for the renovation of Pauley Pavilion. The firm will start with a three-month project of pre-schematic design that will fix the infrastructure changes to be made, and equally important, begin giving prospective donors a clear idea of what they can attach their name to. About $35 million in pledges has been raised so far for what is expected to be a $100 million project.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: The "Blue" squad finished third in the Cougar Invitational in San Marcos, California, shooting a 23-over score of 887 over three rounds. Junior Erik Flores was the top UCLA finisher in third with a score of four under par.

>> This week: The entire Bruin squad, ranked fourth in the nation, is in Ponte Vedra, Florida at the famous Sawgrass Country Club for the 18th John Hayt Collegiates. The tournament runs from Sunday through Tuesday with Bruin senior Kevin Chappell the defending champion. The tournament includes second-ranked Charlotte and no. 3 Alabama in the field.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: No. 8 UCLA lost a tense match to no. 1 Virginia, 4-3, in the quarterfinals of the USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championships yesterday in Seattle. The Bruins had a 3-1 lead, but lost the final three singles matches to come up short. UCLA defeated no. 9 Notre Dame, 4-0 in its opening match of the tournament.

>> This week: The Bruins (6-1) play Oklahoma State in a consolation bracket match today, then come home for Pac-10 matches against Arizona State on Friday and Arizona on Saturday, both at the Los Angeles Tennis Center.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: Dustin DeLeo cleared a lifetime best of 17-1 in the pole vault to win the college division of the Tyson Invitational in Fayetteville, Arkansas on Friday.

>> This week: UCLA’s next meet is in two weeks at the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation indoor championships in Seattle.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: No. 5 UCLA spent the week in Hawaii, losing a five-set match to the Warriors on Thursday, but sweeping Hawaii on Friday to improve to 10-5 overall and 7-4 in MPSF play.

>> This week: UCLA continues its road trip with matches at UC Santa Barbara on Wednesday and Cal State Northridge on Friday.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins swept the Washington schools last weekend, defeating Washington State on Thursday and Washington, 75-68, on Sunday in Pauley Pavilion. UCLA improved to 8-5 in the Pac-10 and 13-11 overall. Senior Lindsey Pluimer (pictured) had 19 points in both games and was named the Pac-10 Player of the Week.

>> This week: The Bruins are tied with USC for fourth in the Pac-10 and need a win in Pauley Pavilion this afternoon to avenge their 64-56 loss at the Galen Center earlier this season. The 1978 AIAW champion team that features Ann Meyers, Denise Curry and Anita Ortega will be saluted at halftime, 30 years after their championship run. The game will be broadcast on KTLK 1150 AM beginning at 2 p.m.

Women’s Golf:

>> Last week: No. 1-ranked UCLA won the Regional Challenge in Palos Verdes held Monday through Wednesday. The Bruins turned back Florida, USC, Arizona State and Stanford with a strong final round. Freshman Glory Yang tied for second overall, All-American Tiffany Joh tied for seventh and freshman Maria Jose Uribe and soph Sydnee Michaels tied for 10th.

>> This week: The Bruins are off until the Arizona Wildcat tournament in Tucson from February 25-27.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> This week: In first meet in nine days, the seventh-ranked Bruins (10-0) are in Berkeley today to face California (2-4) in a dual match in Haas Pavilion. UCLA will then face Arizona in Tucson next Friday (2/22) before returning home for a date with powerhouse Utah in Pauley Pavilion on Sunday, February 24.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: No. 15 UCLA (5-4 overall, 2-4 Pac-10) posted a 158-142 dual meet loss on Friday to no. 25 USC at the Men’s Gym Pool and Sunset Canyon Recreation Center. Junior Anna Poteete posted three wins in the 50 m free, 100 m free and 200 m free, but UCLA won only five of 16 events.

>> This week: The swimmers are off until the Pac-10 Championships at the end of the month.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The no. 8 Bruins (7-1) won twice last week, defeating Loyola Marymount, 7-0, on Wednesday and then cruising past no. 12 Fresno State, 5-2, on Friday, with both matches at the Los Angeles Tennis Center.

>> This week: The Bruins travel to Arizona this week to play Arizona State in Tempe on Friday and Arizona in Tucson on Saturday.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: No. 1 UCLA continued to steamroll its opponents, improving to 12-0 overall and 2-0 in MPSF play with a 13-3 win over no. 10 UC Irvine on Friday and 10-5 over 16th-ranked Cal State Northridge on Saturday. Seniors Kamaile Crowell, Jillian Kraus and Courtney Mathewson each had three goals for the Bruins on Friday and Katie Rulon had three on Saturday.

>> This week: UCLA plays Long Beach State today in Long Beach and then goes to Irvine for the UC Irvine Invitational on Friday and Saturday.

Lindsey Pluimer photo courtesy of UCLA.

 

Sunday Syllabus: the week that was and the week ahead

It’s hard to imagine a better week for a Bruin team than the men’s basketball team had, blowing out Arizona State and Arizona at Pauley Pavilion. But those were only some of the highlights:

Baseball:

>> Last week: If the "experts" are to be believed, UCLA should be pretty good. The Bruins were ranked third in the pre-season Rivals.com poll. In six national pre-season polls, UCLA has been rated 19th, 18th, 17th, seventh, third and first. UCLA’s first game against intercollegiate competition is on February 22.

Football:

>> This week: The signing period for high school players will begin on Wednesday, with UCLA expected to sign an outstanding class of up to 25 players.

Softball:

>> Last week: UCLA was ranked 10th in the nation in the ESPN/USA Softball Pre-Season poll and third in the pre-season poll of Pac-10 coaches. Arizona was ranked tops in both. Senior pitcher Angelica Selden and senior outfielder Krista Colburn, both All-Americans, were named to the Collegiate Player of the Year Pre-Season Watch List by the Amateur Softball Association.

>> This week: The Bruins open their season with the Stacy Wineberg Memorial Tournament at Easton Stadium on campus on Friday, February 8. Nevada, no. 5 Oklahoma, Santa Clara and UC Santa Barbara will all participate and the Bruins will play all of those teams once over the two-day tourney. UCLA will play Oklahoma again on Sunday, February 10.

Men’s Basketball:

>> Last week: The Bruins (20-2 overall, 8-1 Pac-10) completed the first half of their Pac-10 schedule with overwhelming victories against Arizona State on Thursday (84-51) and against Arizona (82-60) on Saturday. In the two games, UCLA shot 57.8% from the field and played stout defense against ASU’s freshman sensation James Harden (9 points) on Thursday and Arizona’s Chase Budinger (also 9) on Saturday. Bruin guard Darren Collison ran his string of consecutive free throws made to 32, setting a school record for consecutive makes in conference games. The old record of 28 was held by Gary Cunningham and set way back in the 1960 season.

>> This week: The second half of the conference schedule begins with a trip to the Washington schools. UCLA will face Washington State on Thursday, February 7 at 7:30 p.m. in Pullman and then travel to Seattle for a Sunday game with the University of Washington at 1:30 p.m.

Men’s Golf:

>> Last week: No. 2 UCLA had some trouble in the first two rounds, but recovered in the third and final round of the Ping/Arizona Intercollegiates to finish third overall. Tennessee and UNLV finished first and second, but a 12-under 275 brought the Bruins up from fifth to third. Senior Kevin Chappell overran the field and won the individual title by seven shots at 15 under par. His 54-hole total of 198 set a school record, one stroke better than Duffy Waldorf’s 199 mark from 1985.

>> This week: UCLA’s next tournament will be on February 11-12 at the Cougar Invitational in Sam Marcos.

Men’s Tennis:

>> Last week: The Bruins had a busy week, finally opening their season against no. 16 Pepperdine on January 29 with a 5-2 win, then traveling to Stanford for a 5-2 win over the Cardinal on Friday. The Saturday match at California was rained out and was re-scheduled for today, starting at 10:30 a.m.

>> This week: No. 9 UCLA plays California in Berkeley today, then comes home to the Los Angeles Tennis Center for matches against the University of San Diego on Wednesday (1:30 p.m.) and Boise State (also 1:30 p.m.).

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: The Bruins went wild in the Washington Indoor Invitational in Seattle, winning three events. John Caulfield had a lifetime best of 63-7 to win the shot put, Boldizar Kocsor won the weight throw with a lifetime best of 69-10 1/4 and freshman Jonathan Clark won the triple jump at 49-7 3/4. Senior Austin Ramos finished second in the 3000 m, but set a school indoor record of 7:55.60, the second-best mark in the nation this year.

>> This week: The Bruins are off until the weekend of February 15-16, when split squads will go to meet in Arkansas and Iowa.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Last week: That old Al Scates magic is starting to settle in on the Bruins, who compiled two straight wins over quality opponents in four days. UCLA edged the no. 1-ranked NAIA team, Cal Baptist, in five games last Wednesday in Pauley Pavilion, then blitzed ninth-ranked UC Irvine in four sets in Pauley in Friday evening. The Bruins are now on a three-match win streak and have won seven of their last nine matches.

>> This week: The Bruins (8-3 overall, 5-2 in Mountain Pacific Sports Federation play) are ranked fourth in the country and will try to avenge one of their defeats this season when they play USC in Pauley Pavilion on Wednesday, starting at 7:00 p.m. On Saturday, UCLA will host no. 2 Pepperdine in the annual Kilgour Cup match, also in Pauley Pavilion.

Men’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: Bruin head coach Adam Krikorian received a two-game suspension from the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation for "confronting a game official at the official’s hotel" after the November 23 MPSF tournament triple-overtime loss to UC Irvine, 10-9. A report of the suspension in the Daily Bruin indicated that the league and UCLA were in agreement on the penalty.

Women’s Basketball:

>> Last week: UCLA came up empty in the Bay Area and fell to 11-11 on the season and 6-5 in the Pac-10 with losses at no. 9 California (67-53) and no. 7 Stanford (75-62). Freshman Doreena Campbell led the Bruins with 10 against the Bears and senior Lindsey Pluimer had 16 against Stanford.

>> This week: The Bruins are home this week to Washington State on Friday and Washington on Sunday, with both games in Pauley Pavilion. UCLA won both games on the Washington road trip in mid-January.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> Last week: The Bruins remained undefeated in dual competition this season, flying past Washington in Seattle by a 195.975 to 194.425 count on Friday evening. UCLA swept the top places in the all-around competition with Tasha Schwikert edging Anna Li for the top spot with Brittani McCullough third.

>> This week: UCLA (7-0) heads to Chicago for the IGI Chicago Style Meet against Illinois, Stanford and Washington on Friday, February 8.

Women’s Swimming:

>> Last week: The Bruins (5-3) were overmatched against no. 3 Stanford and no. 5 California over the weekend and lost two dual meets in two days. No. 14 UCLA lost to Stanford, 166-133 on Friday and then fell to Cal, 170-130 on Saturday. Senior Nicoette Teo won the 100 m and 200 m breaststroke events in both meets held on the UCLA campus.

>> This week: The Bruins are off until their dual showdown with USC on February 16 on campus.

Women’s Tennis:

>> Last week: No. 3 UCLA ran its seasonal mark to 3-0 with wins over UC Irvine on Thursday, 5-2, and against 19th-ranked Pepperdine in Malibu, 5-2, on Friday.

>> This week: The Bruins head to Madison, Wisconsin for the USTA/ITA National Team Indoor Championships beginning on Thursday.

Women’s Track & Field:

>> Last week: The Bruins posted no winners at the Washington Invitational, but junior Katy Viuf, competing in just her second pole vault competition ever, cleared 13-1 3/4 for sixth overall and second among collegiate vaulters. Her mark is in the national collegiate top ten.

>> This week: UCLA is off this week and will head to the Tyson Invitational in Arkansas in two weeks.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> Last week: The no. 1-ranked Bruins (5-0) eased past no. 12 Loyola Marymount, 13-5, in Westchester on Saturday. Junior Tanya Gandy led UCLA with three goals in the win.

>> This week: The Bruins will play Hartwick on Tuesday at the Sunset Canyon Recreation Center and then travel north for the Stanford Invitational on Saturday and Sunday, February 9-10.

 

Bruin SportsWire: Wearing the red, white and blue

Uclablogpixspicer_nellieb300It’s said that there is no off-season for sports any more. That’s certainly true for some of the Bruins as four stars from UCLA’s fall women’s teams are in training with the U.S. National Teams.

Football:

>> UCLA announced today that the home game against Arizona scheduled for Sept. 27 has been moved to Sept. 20 at the request of television. The Bruins will now play Fresno State, Tennessee, at BYU and Arizona on consecutive weekends before their first bye.

>> Bruin fullback Michael Pitre, lost for the entire 2007 season due to injury, is filing for a sixth year of eligibility with the NCAA. He has been told by UCLA that his scholarship will be honored for his final year in school, whether he is allowed to play or not.

Softball:

>> The pre-season polls are out and perennial NCAA title contender UCLA is considered good, but not great. The Bruins were ranked 10th in the nation in the ESPN/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25 poll and 17th in the NFCA national coaches poll. In the Pac-10 coaches poll, the Bruins were ranked third behind Arizona (pre-season national title favorite) and Arizona State. UCLA starts play Feb. 8 at Easton Stadium on campus.

Men’s Golf:

>> The Bruins were ranked second nationally going into this week’s PING Invitational in Arizona, but have fallen well back after two rounds of the three-round tournament. Senior Kevin Chappell was the individual leader, however, with the final round being played today.

Men’s Tennis:

>> The match between No. 9 UCLA and No. 17 Pepperdine that was re-scheduled for Monday has been moved to today at the Los Angeles Tennis Center, beginning at 3 p.m.

Men’s Track & Field:

>> Junior Laef Barnes was the highlight for the Bruins in the Washington Preview in Seattle, running the mile in a lifetime best of 4:03.28. That’s good enough for a provisional NCAA qualifying mark for the indoor nationals in his first race of the season.

Men’s Volleyball:

>> Fourth-ranked UCLA (6-3) will play the first of four home matches with a non-conference tilt against Cal Baptist (top-ranked in the NAIA) on Wednesday at Pauley Pavilion starting at 7 p.m. It’s also Club and High School team night and teams can register by calling (310) 206-3444.

Women’s Gymnastics:

>> The No. 8 Bruins barely got by No. 9 Stanford, 195.050 to 195.025 last Sunday, as senior Tasha Schwikert scored a needed 9.8 on the floor exercise to seal the win and got exactly that score. Anna Li and Brittani McCullough went 1-2 in the all-around for the third straight meet, but Kristina Comforte suffered a knee injury during the floor exercise and had to be carried off the floor. She had an MRI on Monday and will see a doctor today for further review.

Women’s Soccer:

>> UCLA’s dynamic duo of striker Lauren Cheney and midfielder Tina DiMartino have been called up to the training camp for the U.S. National Team, taking place at The Home Depot Center in Carson. Both played on the winning Four Nations Tournament team in China and the camp that starts on Feb. 1 will select players for the Algarve Cup in Portugal (March 5-12) and the CONCACAF Olympic Women’s Qualifying Tournament in Juarez, Mexico (April 2-13).

Women’s Volleyball:

>> All-American setter Nellie Spicer (pictured) joined former Bruin senior outside hitter Rachell Johnson with the U.S. National Team in Colorado Springs, Colo., earning an invitation from USA Volleyball. She will report Feb. 18 and is in the pool of players who could participate in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.

Women’s Water Polo:

>> No. 1-ranked UCLA beat Colorado State, 15-2 and Indiana, 15-6, on Sunday to finish the Michigan Invitational undefeated at 4-0. Junior forward Katie Rulon scored 12 goals over the weekend’s play to earn Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Co-Player of the Week honors with San Jose State goalie Kendra Adama. The Spartans were also 4-0 on the weekend.

Nellie Spicer photo courtesy UCLA.

 

Weekend warmup: all about football

Uclablogpixpluimer_lindseya300While the football season is winding down and basketball is just starting, it's tournament time for most of the Bruin fall sports teams, including both soccer squads in NCAA Tournament action:

Football:

>> UCLA is 5-5 and needs one more victory in its last two games to be bowl-eligible. The Bruins finish their home schedule Saturday against Oregon (8-2) at the Rose Bowl and probably will set a record for single-season attendance. The Bruins have averaged 77,167 at home this season and are poised to surpass the existing mark of 73,709 set in the 1998 season. This season is only the second in history in which UCLA will average more than 70,000 fans per home game.

Track and field:

>> One of the key figures in the development of the UCLA athletic department received a signal honor this week when Elvin C. "Ducky" Drake was voted into the National Track & Field Hall of Fame.

Drake was an assistant coach from 1929-44 and the head coach from 1947-64, giving way to Jim Bush. During his tenure, UCLA won the 1956 NCAA Track & Field Championship, and he coached two of the greatest decathletes of all time, Rafer Johnson and C.K. Yang. Johnson was a silver medalist in the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia, and won the gold medal in Rome in 1960 in a close competition with Yang, his friend and fellow Bruin. The UCLA track and field stadium was named for him in 1973.

Drake graduated from UCLA in 1927 (before the Westwood campus opened!) and also was the Bruins’ head athletic trainer after his retirement as track coach, continuing through 1986.

Men’s basketball:

>> The Bruins (5-0) are ranked No. 1 in one poll and No. 2 in another, and will take on Yale at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Pauley Pavilion. The game will be shown on online at uclabruins.com, with radio coverage on KTLK-AM 1150 and the Bruin Radio Network with Chris Roberts on play-by-play and Don MacLean as analyst.

The Bruins have a 1-0 record all-time against the Bulldogs.

Men’s soccer:

>> The Bruins finished the regular season with a disappointing 8-8-3 record, but made it into the NCAA Tournament. They’ll start play this weekend against Mountain Pacific Sports Federation champion New Mexico (12-4-2) at 7 p.m. Saturday at Drake Stadium. Tickets are $9 for adults and $7 for students (with identification) and children. The game will be audiocast on the Internet at uclabruins.com.

Men’s water polo:

>> Although UCLA has been ranked in the top five in the nation almost the entire season, the Bruins probably will have to win the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament this weekend in Berkeley to make to the NCAA Tournament. Play starts on Friday with the Bruins (19-6) as the fourth seed, facing fifth-seed UC Irvine (12-10). If the Bruins win, they would play the winne