The 2025-26 UCLA Women’s Basketball Information Guide was compiled by Corey Mueller, Assistant Director for Athletic Communications. Primary photography by ASUCLA (Don Liebig), UCLA Athletics (Jesus Ramirez, Eric Hurd, and Suzi Mellano), and UCLA Women’s Basketball (Caren Nicdao). Additional photos provided by Scott Chandler, Thomas Campbell, FIBA, USA Basketball, Berliner Studios, Andrew Bernstein, Elsa/Getty Images, Los Angeles Sparks, David Sherman/Minnesota Lynx, Chicago Sky, NBAE, Getty Images, Ruth Chambers, Percy Anderson, WNBA Photos and NBA Photos.
The History
The Postseason
NCAA
Weekly Availability
Coach Close and select student-athletes are available on a weekly basis at team practices at Pauley Pavilion or the Mo Ostin Basketball Center. In order to attend these sessions, please RSVP to Corey Mueller’s media advisories via email or text message.
Media sessions will also occasionally take place over Zoom with advance notice. If you’d like to join our media sessions or be added to our email list, please contact Corey Mueller (cmueller@ athletics.ucla.edu).
Credentials
Admission to Pauley Pavilion’s press seating and media room is by credential only. All credential requests should be made via the UCLA credential portal (https://crednet.dia.ucla.edu/) at least two days (48 hours) in advance of the game.
Members of the media covering UCLA should request credentials for road games through UCLA SID Corey Mueller via email or phone. Photographers should follow the same instructions as media members.
Postgame Procedures
The Michael Price Family UCLA Women’s Head Basketball Coach Cori Close and selected players will be available to the media in Pauley Pavilion’s media room following a 10-minute cooling off period after each game. UCLA’s locker room is closed to the media, as are all team spaces (weight room, training room, etc.).
To access the media room during or after the game, follow the stairwell down to the court and proceed to the northeast corner to the door marked “Dick Enberg Press Room” (elevator access available on the southeast corner of the building). The visiting team’s head coach will be available following a 10-minute cooling off period during conference play.
Michaela
Lauren Betts
Cori Close
GENERAL INFORMATION
Location: Los Angeles, CA 90095-1639
Founded: 1919
Enrollment: 46,000
Nickname: Bruins
Colors: Blue and Gold
Arena (Capacity): Pauley Pavilion (13,800)
Location (Year Built): On-Campus (1965-66)
Affiliation: NCAA Division I
Conference: Big Ten
Chancellor: Dr. Julio Frenk
310-825-2151
Athletic Director: Martin Jarmond
310-825-8699
Senior Woman Administrator: Dr. Christina Rivera
310-825-8699
Faculty Athletic Representative: Dr. Michael Teitell
Athletic Department Phone: 310-825-8699
Ticket Office Phone: 310-UCLA-WIN
HISTORY
First Year of Basketball: 1974-75 (52nd season)
Overall All-Time Record: 983-569 (.633)
Years In NCAA Tournament (Last): 20 (2024-25)
Years In AIAW Tournament (Last): 7 (1981)
Years In WNIT (Last): 2 (2022)
Number of NCAA Titles: 0
Number of AIAW Titles: 1 (1978)
Number of WNIT Titles: 1 (2015)
Number of Conference Titles: 1 (1999)
Number of Conference Tournament Titles: 2 (2006, 2025)
Athletic Trainer: Mia Fields (Utah ‘19/CSU Fullerton ‘21)
Executive Assistant: Alex Edge (NC State)
Sports Information Director: Corey Mueller (Northwestern ‘18/Georgetown ‘23)
RADIO INFORMATION
TEAM INFORMATION
Starters Returning (4): Name
Lauren Betts C 6-7
2025 Lisa Leslie Center of the Year, Unanimous Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, First Team All-Big Ten, Big Ten All-Defensive Team, swept the national Defensive Player of the Year awards (AP, Naismith, USBWA, WBCA), UCLA’s first Associated Press First Team All-America, John R. Wooden Award All-American, Naismith/USBWA/WBCA First Team All-America
Angela Dugalić F
Improved her field goal percentage from long range to average career-best 3-point shooting mark (.348 3FG%), earned Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll
Gabriela Jaquez G 6-0
Averaged career-bests in field goal percentage (.523 FG%) and 3-point percentage (.348 3FG%), also showed marked improvement at the free throw line (.826 FT%), named to the Rainbow Wahine Showdown All-Tournament Team and Spokane 1 Regional All-Region Team.
Kiki Rice G 5-11
Shot career-bests from the floor (.485 FG%) and from long range (.365 3FG%), team leader in assists (170) and assists per game (5.0 APG) for the Bruins, surpassed 100 assists for the third-consecutive season… First Team All-Big Ten, 2025 Nancy Lieberman Point Guard of the Year finalist, AP and WBCA All-America Honorable Mention
Starters Lost (1):
Letterwinners Returning (5):
Lauren Betts C 6-7
Big Ten Academic Honor Roll, 3x Big Ten Player of the Week, All-Tournament Team and Most Outstanding Player at three tournaments in 2024-25 (Rainbow Wahine Showdown, Big Ten Tournament, Spokane 1 Regional)
Angela Dugalić F 6-4
Set a new career-high in points (22 at Long Beach State, Dec. 14) and rebounds (15 vs. Arkansas, Nov. 17)… Had a monstrous 18-point, 15-rebound double-double against Arkansas (W, 101-52)
Timea Gardiner F 6-3
Shot a team-leading .395 from 3-point range, averaging 7.6 points per game off the bench for the Bruins. Helped lift UCLA past No. 3-seed LSU in the Elite Eight, shooting 5-for-8 from long distance (.625 3FG%) to reach the program’s first-ever NCAA Final Four.
Gabriela Jaquez G
All-Big Ten Honorable Mention (Media), Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll
Kiki Rice G 5-11
Big Ten Sportsmanship Honoree, Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll, NCAA Elite 90 Award Winner, Arthur Ashe Jr. Award Sports Scholar, Rainbow Wahine Showdown All-Tournament Team, NCAA Spokane 1 Regional All-Tournament Team
Letterwinners Lost (6):
Zania Socka-Nguemen F
Indiana.
Redshirt Players Returning (2):
Name
Charlisse Leger-Walker G 5-10
- - - Sat out 2024-25 due to an ACL injury sustained in Jan. 2024. Amanda Muse F 6-4 Jr. -
Appeared in 19 games as a freshman in 2023-24.
NON-CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
Monday Nov. 3
Thursday Nov. 6
Monday Nov. 10
Thursday Nov. 13
Saturday Nov. 15
Sunday Nov. 23
Wednesday Nov. 26
Thursday Nov. 27 South Carolina or Duke2
Sunday Nov. 30
Tuesday Dec. 16
Saturday Dec. 20
BIG TEN CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
- Sun. March 4-8
- Thurs. March 18-19
- Sat. March 20-21
-
-
March 22-23
March 27-28
POSTSEASON SCHEDULE
March Madness - Sweet 16 Fort Worth, Texas or
- Sat. March 29-30 NCAA March Madness - Elite Eight Fort Worth, Texas or Sacramento, Calif.
Friday April 3
Sunday April 5
times
NCAA March Madness - Final Four
NCAA March Madness - Championship
1. WBCA Challenge -- Las Vegas, Nev. (Michelob ULTRA Arena)
Player’s Era Women’s Championship -- Las Vegas, Nev. (Michelob ULTRA Arena)
Ariz. (PHX Arena)
Ariz. (PHX Arena)
NUMERICAL
ROSTER
Name
(High School/Previous School)
1 Kiki Rice G 5-11 Sr. Bethesda, Md. (Sidwell Friends)
3 Christina Karamouzi G 5-11 Fr. Stockholm, Sweden
5 Charlisse Leger-Walker G 5-10 Gr. Waikato, New Zealand (St. Peter’s School Cambridge / Washington State)
8 Gianna Kneepkens G 6-0 Gr. Duluth, Minn. (Duluth Marshall HS / Utah)
9 Lena Bilić G 6-3 Fr. Zagreb, Croatia (XVI Gimnazija)
11 Gabriela Jaquez G 6-0 Sr. Camarillo, Calif. (Camarillo)
16 Sienna Betts F 6-4 Fr. Centennial, Colo. (Grandview)
43 Megan Grant G/F 5-10 Sr. San Bruno, Calif. (Aragon) 11 Gabriela Jaquez G 6-0 Sr. Camarillo, Calif. (Camarillo)
3 Christina Karamouzi G 5-11 Fr. Stockholm, Sweden
8 Gianna Kneepkens G 6-0 Gr. Duluth, Minn. (Duluth Marshall HS / Utah)
5 Charlisse Leger-Walker G 5-10 Gr. Waikato, New Zealand (St. Peter’s School Cambridge / Washington State)
33 Amanda Muse F 6-4 R-So. Brentwood, Calif. (Heritage)
1 Kiki Rice G 5-11 Sr. Bethesda, Md. (Sidwell Friends)
COACHING STAFF
Cori Close Head Coach, 15th season UC Santa Barbara ’93
Tony Newnan Associate Head Coach, 15th season UC Santa Barbara ’92
Tasha Brown Assistant Coach, 8th season St. Ambrose ’97
Sohseki Matsuura Assistant Coach, 3rd season UCLA ‘20
James Clark Assistant Coach, 2nd season LaSalle ‘04
Michaela Onyenwere Assistant Coach, 1st season UCLA ‘21
SUPPORT STAFF
Pam Walker Director of Operations UCLA ’85
Sam Skinner Assistant GM Brown ‘20 / UCLA ‘24
Alex Zachem Video Coordinator Saint Joseph’s ‘17
Caren Nicdao Director of Creative Content UCLA ‘16
Mia Fields Athletic Trainer Utah ‘19 / CSU Fullerton ‘21
Corey Mueller Sports Information Director Northwestern ‘18 / Georgetown ‘23
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Kiki Rice – KEY-key RICE
Charlisse Leger-Walker – CHAR-lease ledger-walker
Gabriela Jaquez – gab-ree-EL-uh HAWK-ez
Angela Dugalić – AN-jel-uh DOO-guh-leech
Lauren Betts – LORE-in BETS
Lena Bilić - LEN-uh BILL-itch
UCLA WBB ON SOCIAL MEDIA
Twitter: @uclawbb
Instagram: @uclawbbThreads: @uclawbb
Facebook: www.facebook.com/UCLAWomensBasketball
Soh Matsuura – SO mot-SUE-rah Michaela Onyenwere – own-yen-ware-ay
2024-25
LAUREN BETTS 51
6-7 / Senior Center
Centennial, Colo.
Grandview HS | Stanford
An outstanding year for the Bruin center… Became UCLA women’s basketball’s firstever national defensive player of the year… Was a unanimous selection for Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year by coaches in the conference… Achieved First Bruin with 600+ points, 300+ rebounds, 100+ blocks in a season… Set a new single-season blocks record with her 100 rejections this year… Also captured the UCLA single-game blocks record with nine against No. 25 Baylor at the Coretta Scott King Classic… The team’s leading scorer (20.2 PPG) had a career-high 33 points at No. 8 Maryland, one of four games in which she scored 30+ points… Had 19 double-doubles this season, the second most by a Bruin in program history… Showed offensive versatility by setting a new career-high in assists (11) vs. Minnesota, the most by a player 6-foot-7 or taller since 2002-03, according to Stathead’s game log archive (previous: 9, Brittney Griner - 3/9/2013)… Became just the third player to record multiple 30-point, 10-rebound double-doubles in an NCAA tournament in the last 25 years, joining Elena Delle Donne and Brittney Griner… Betts is the only to do so shooting 80 percent or better from the field… STATS: Ranked first in the Big Ten in blocks (100) and blocks per game (2.9 BPG), fifth in the NCAA in those categories… First in the B1G, second in the NCAA in field goals made (294)… Second in the B1G, fifth in the NCAA in field goal percentage (64.8 FG%)… HONORS: 3x Big Ten Player of the Week (Nov. 18, Jan. 27, Feb. 24)… Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll… First Team All-Big Ten (Coaches* & Media*)… Big Ten All-Defensive Team (Coaches* & Media)… Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year (Coaches* & Media)… Rainbow Wahine Showdown All-Tournament Team and Most Outstanding Player… Big Ten Tournament All-Tournament Team and Most Outstanding Player… Spokane 1 Regional All-Region Team and Most Outstanding Player… 2025 NCAA Tournament All-Tournament Team… Associated Press First Team All-America… John R. Wooden Award All-American… 2025 Lisa Leslie Center of the Year… Naismith Women’s Defensive Player of the Year… Naismith First Team All-America… USBWA First Team All-America… WBCA Defensive Player of the Year… WBCA First Team All-America. *indicates unanimous selection
2023-24
Set new single-game career highs in eight statistical categories in her debut season with the Bruins… Recorded a career-high 18 rebounds against then-No. 20 Florida State in UCLA’s 17-point win over the Seminoles on Dec. 10… Repeated her 18-rebound mark against No. 2-seed USC in the Pac-12 semifinal on March 8… Closed the season with three-consecutive double-doubles on her way to 12 on the year… Recorded 14 points and 17 rebounds with four blocks against No. 3-seed LSU in the NCAA tournament… Swatted a career-high six shots against then-No. 6 USC on Dec. 30… Scored her career-high 24 points after knocking down a late jumper against then-No. 11 Oregon State in the heartbreaking loss on Feb. 16… Played 29 games, starting 27 of her appearances… Averaged 27.2 minutes per game… Led UCLA in points (14.9) and rebounds (9.3) per game… Shot a team-leading .643 from the floor, which ranked third in the NCAA for the season… Named to the 2024 Lisa Leslie Center of the Year Award Top 10 list… Also made the cut for the John R. Wooden Award presented by Principal Late Season Top 20 Watch List… Joined Charisma Osborne and Kiki Rice on the 2024 Jersey Mike’s Naismith Trophy Women’s Player of the Year Midseason Team… Honors: Five-time UCLA Student-Athlete of the Week presented by Ready… All-Pac-12 (Coaches)… Pac-12 All-Defensive (Coaches)… All-Pac-12 (Media)… Pac-12 All-Defensive (Media)… Pac-12 All-Tournament Team… Albany 2 All-Regional Tournament Team (NCAA)… USBWA All-America Honorable Mention… Associated Press All-America Honorable Mention.
Prior to UCLA… 2022-23 (at Stanford)
Appeared in 33 games off the bench… Averaged 5.9 points, 3.5 rebounds and nearly one block in 9.7 minutes per game… Shot a team-high 60.2 percent from the field, the fifth-best single-season shooting percentage in school history… Ranked fourth on the team in rebounding and fifth in scoring… Scored a season-high 18 points against CSUN (11/9)… First double-double came against Grambling State (11/26), scoring 11 points with 13 rebounds… Finished with 10 double-digit scoring performances, including five of her last nine games vs. Pac-12 opponents… Dished a season-best three assists at No. 21 Colorado (2/23)… Blocked a season-high four shots at No. 17 Arizona (2/9)… Totaled three steals at Portland (11/13)… Averaged over eight points per game in her last 11 appearances of the season… Pac-12 regular-season champion… HONORS: Pac-12 All-Freshman Team Honorable Mention (Coaches)… Pac-12 Freshman of the Week (Feb. 13, 2023)... USA Basketball: Has won two gold medals playing for the United States (2021 FIBA U19 World Cup in Hungary, 2019 FIBA Americas U16 Championship in Chile) and a silver medal (2023 FIBA Americup W)… Named to the All-Star Five at the 2019 FIBA Americas U16 Championship after averaging a double-double… Youngest player on the 2021 FIBA U19 World Cup team, nearly averaging a double-double.
HIGH SCHOOL
A 2022 graduate of Grandview High School in Aurora, Colo., she was a five-star talent… Rated as the No. 1 player in the country according to both ESPN HoopGurlz and Prospects Nation… McDonald’s All-American (2022)… Jordan Brand Classic All-American (2022)… WBCA High School Player of the Year (2022)… Two-time Colorado Gatorade Player of the Year (2021-22)… One of four players in state history to win the award multiple times… CHSAA Colorado Player of the Year (2022)… Four-time all-conference and all-state (2018-22)… Won Colorado state championship as a senior in 2021-22, averaging 17.2 points, 11.0 rebounds, 3.6 blocks and 3.5 assists per game… As a junior in 2020-21, averaged 17.5 points, 11.0 rebounds, 2.6 blocks and 1.9 assists per game, shooting 80 percent from the field… Team advanced to semifinals of the state championship… Advanced to the state championship game as both a freshman and sophomore… Played club basketball for Colorado Premier (2019-21)… Also played volleyball as a freshman and enjoyed competitive swimming as a child.
PERSONAL
Born in Vitoria, Spain and lived in Barcelona, Seville, Málaga and San Sebastian before moving to Colorado at the age of eight… Daughter of Michelle and Andy Betts… Mother, Michelle, played volleyball at Long Beach State, winning the 1993 national championship… Father, Andy, played basketball at Long Beach State… Picked in the second round of the 1998 NBA Draft by the Charlotte Hornets… Featured experience playing for both England and Great Britain national teams… Played professional basketball in Europe for 14 years in Spain, Italy, Greece and Ukraine… Oldest of four children, with younger sister Sienna and younger brothers Dylan and Ashton… Volunteered locally with Project C.U.R.E., preparing medical supplies to be sent to developing countries around the world… Donated her time at the Ronald McDonald House-Denver and as a youth basketball coach.
6-4 / Freshman
Forward
Centennial, Colo. Grandview
Lena BILIć
6-3 / Freshman Guard / Forward Zagreb, Croatia
XVI Gimnazija
2024-25
ANGELA DUGALIć 32
6-4 / Graduate Student Forward
Des Plaines, Ill.
Maine West HS | Oregon
Started 34 of her 35 appearances… Improved her field goal percentage from long range to averaged career-best 3-point shooting percentage (.348 3FG%)… Scored 7.4 points and collected 5.5 rebounds per game… Had a team-leading 50 steals on the year (1.4 SPG)… Set a new career-high in points (22 at Long Beach State, Dec. 14) and rebounds (15 vs. Arkansas, Nov. 17)… Had a monstrous 18-point, 15-rebound double-double against Arkansas (W, 101-52)… One of two double-doubles on the year, bringing her career total to three… Got into double-digit scoring 10 times… Was a perfect 2-for-2 from both 3-point range and the free throw line against No. 1-seed USC on March 9, shooting 100 percent in UCLA’s first-ever Big Ten Tournament Championship title… Averaged 21.7 minutes of playing time per game… HONORS: Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll… SERBIAN NATIONAL TEAM: Scored nine points in Serbia’s win over Portugal (Nov. 7 – W, 71-37) and added eight rebounds and three steals to the box score at the 2025 FIBA Women’s EuroBasket Qualifiers… Had seven points, three rebounds and two steals in Serbia’s 26-point win over Ukraine on Nov. 10… Serbia qualified for the EuroBasket 2025 competition, which will be held in Czechia, Germany, Italy and Greece from June 18-29, 2025.
2023-24
Averaged career highs in points (8.7), rebounds (6.5) and assists (2.1) per game, starting 29 of her 30 appearances with the Bruins… Set her new single-game career high when she scored 17 points against her former program, Oregon, on Jan. 5… Matched that total in UCLA’s first game of the Pac-12 tournament on March 7… Flew to Brazil in the first week of February for the FIBA Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament 2024… The senior averaged 7.0 points, 6.0 rebounds and 1.0 assists per game in three starts with the Serbian national team... Played 24.5 minutes per contest and shot .400 from beyond the arc (4-for-10 3FG) ... Announced her return to UCLA for a fifth year of eligibility on April 5.
2022-23
Missed the entire 2022-23 campaign due to injury.
2021-22
Made her season debut on Feb. 11 at Washington State after recovering from a preseason injury ... Played in the last 14 games of the season averaging 6.5 points per game ... Put up a season high of five field goals and was perfect from the three-point line against USC (Mar. 02) ... Claimed another season high at home against USC with 12 rebounds, eight defensive and four offensive ... Went 3-3 in free throws in the home matchup against Utah (Feb. 20) ... Shot for a season high 0.667 in the first round of the WNIT against UC Irvine (Mar. 18) ... Played a season high of 27 minutes against Oregon State in the WNIT matchup (Mar. 27) ... Improved her rebounds per game from 4.0 to 4.5 from the 2020-21 season to the 2021-22 season.
Prior to UCLA... 2020-21(at Oregon)
Appeared in all 24 games for the Ducks as a true freshman, making one start ... Averaged 3.4 points and 4.0 rebounds per game while shooting 42.4 percent (36-of-85) from the floor ... Two double-figure scoring performances and 10 games with five or more rebounds, including a trio of nine-rebound showings ... Four points in collegiate debut vs. Seattle U on Nov. 28 ... Nearly had the first double-double of her career with nine points and nine rebounds on Dec. 6 vs. Utah ... Grabbed nine rebounds vs. USC on Jan. 1 ... Once again came just one rebound shy of a double-double on Jan. 3 vs. No. 11 UCLA, going 6-of-10 from the floor for a season-high 13 points while pulling down nine boards ... Impressed in first career start on Jan. 24 vs. Washington, scoring 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting while grabbing eight rebounds (four offensive) ... Played 11 minutes in the Pac-12 Tournament quarterfinals vs. Oregon State (March 4) before seeing limited action in Oregon’s three NCAA Tournament games.
High School
One of five five-star freshmen to join the Ducks ahead of the 2020-21 season, giving Oregon the nation’s undisputed top-ranked recruiting class ... The nation’s No. 22 ranked recruit in the class of 2020 according to the final espnW top-100 rankings, and a consensus top-50 recruit by Blue Star, Prospect Nation and ASGR ... A McDonalds all-American and Jordan Brand Classic selection as a senior, as well as the 2020 Illinois Gatorade State player of the year and 2020 Illinois Miss Basketball ... Led Maine West High School to a 30-4 record and the Super-Sectional round of the Class 4A state tournament, averaging a double-double with 20.6 points and 10.3 rebounds per game to go along with 2.7 assists, 2.7 steals and 1.7 blocks per game ... A firstteam Illinois all-state selection in 2019 after leading Maine West to an undefeated 35-0 record and the 2019 Illinois 4-A State Championship ... Averaged 13.2 points, 8.7 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 2.7 steals as a junior ... Maintained a solid 3.4 GPA in the classroom while excelling on the basketball court.
Personal
An aspiring artist, she created and designed T-shirts and artwork for Maine West athletic teams ... Also volunteered locally with the Feed My Starving Children and Operation Christmas Child foundations.
2024-25
TIMEA GARDINER 30
6-3 / Senior Forward Ogden, Utah
Fremont HS | Oregon State
Started the year with a scorching performance in Paris, shooting 5-of-7 from 3-point range against then-No. 17 Louisville, to finish with 15 points and seven reobunds in the season-opening win… Recorded a 7-for-12 shooting performance against Arkansas on Nov. 17 to set a new career-high in points (23) and 3FGM (7)… Led UCLA in 3-point shooting percentage, connecting at a 39.5 percent clip from long distance on the year… A strong contributor off the bench… Scored 7.6 points in 18.3 minutes on the floor, and corralled 3.4 rebounds per game… Secured her lone double-double of the season against Wisconsin in Madison on Feb. 26, scoring 14 points and collecting 10 rebounds in UCLA’s 91-61 win over the Badgers… Made significant contributions in the postseason, scoring three or more 3-pointers in four of the final six games of the year… Shot .500 against both Southern University and Richmond in the first and second rounds of the NCAA tournament (3-for-6 3FG in each game)… Helped lift UCLA past No. 3-seed LSU in the Elite Eight, shooting 5-for-8 from long distance (.625 3FG%) to reach the program’s first-ever NCAA Final Four.
Prior to UCLA…
2023-24 (at Oregon State)
Appearing in all 35 contests of her sophomore campaign at Oregon State, Gardiner scored 406 points and collected 244 rebounds while shooting 39.5 percent from three-point land. She made nine starts for the Beavs; she was named the Pac-12 Sixth Player of the Year, leading the Conference with 10.2 points per game off the bench prior to the postseason. She blocked a career-high four shots against Nebraska in the second round of the 2024 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament.
2022-23 (at Oregon State)
As a freshman, Gardiner made an appearance in 15 games, starting two, after returning from a medical issue. She earned Pac-12 All-Freshman Honorable Mention honors for her performance despite only playing half of the season, averaging 8.7 points and 3.5 rebounds per game. The Ogden, Utah native shot 47.7 percent from the floor and 36.2 percent from long distance. She received Pac-12 Freshman of the Week recognition after scoring 15 points on 7-of-10 shooting in a win over then-no. 23 Oregon (Jan. 20). Gardiner recorded seven double-figure scoring games in 15 contests, including three against top-25 foes.
High School
Gardiner racked up accolades in high school before arriving in Corvallis. She was a McDonald’s All-American and Jordan Brand Classic All-American. Gardiner was named to the Naismith All-America Second Team in 2022, and she was listed as Honorable Mention in 2019, 2020 and 2021. She was a Naismith Player of the Year Semi-Finalist. Gardiner was All-Utah First Team three times, All-Region MVP twice, and named Utah All-Tournament Team twice.
Softball Career Highlights
MEGAN GRANT 43
5-10 / Senior Guard / Forward
San Bruno, Calif. Aragon
• USA Softball Player of the Year Top 25 Finalist (2025)
• 2-time NFCA All-American (First Team - 2025; Second Team - 2023)
• NFCA Freshman of the Year Top 10 List (2023)
• All-Big Ten First Team (2025)
• 2-time All-Pac-12 First Team honoree (2024, 2023)
• 3-time NFCA All-West Region honoree (First Team - 2025, 2023; Second Team - 2024)
• Pac-12 All-Freshman Team (2023)
• 2-time NFCA National Player of the Week (last April 15, 2025)
• 2-time Big Ten Player of the Week (last April 14, 2025)
• 2-time Pac-12 Freshman of the Week (last April 17, 2023)
• 2-time Softball America All-American (First Team - 2025; Third Team - 2023)
• 2-time D1Softball All-American (First Team - 2025; Third Team - 2023)
2025 Grant was named an NFCA First Team All-American and was a USA Softball Player of the Year Top 25 Finalist in her junior season … also named to the All-Big Ten and NFCA All-West Region First Teams … tabbed as a first team All-American by media outlets Softball America and D1Softball … played 67 games and made 65 starts … made 47 starts at first base, 12 in right field and six at designated player … hit in the cleanup spot in all 65 starts … recorded a .376 batting average (62-for-165), .540 on-base percentage and .933 slugging percentage … totaled 26 home runs, 12 doubles and one triple … recorded 81 RBIs and 46 runs scored … the team leader in home runs, slugging percentage, on-base percentage and walks … set the Big Ten singleseason record for home runs with 26 … her totals are ranked in the top-10 of multiple UCLA single-season records: second in home runs (26), third in RBIs (81), fourth in slugging percentage (.933) and sixth in walks (49) … matched Stacey Nuveman as the fastest Bruins to reach 20 home runs in a season, needing only 43 games … national ranks: third in home runs (26), sixth in RBIs (81), 10th in slugging percentage (.933) and walks (49) … Big Ten ranks: first in home runs (26), first in walks (49), second in RBIs (81) and fourth in slugging percentage (.933) … recorded three two-homer performances … hit three grand slams, all coming withing a four-game span, earning her NFCA National Player of the Week (April 25) … two-time Big Ten Player of the Week recipient (April 7 & 14) … homered in five straight games from March 1-8, matching B.B. Bates’ record set in 2013 … also homered in four straight games from April 8-13 with five total during that span … logged a team-high 23 multi-RBI performances and 18 multi-hit performances … in NCAA Tournament play, hit for a .360 batting average (9-for-25) with three home runs, one triple, eight RBIs and five runs scored … hit a gametying two-run homer in the top of the seventh off No. 7 Tennessee’s Karlyn Pickens with UCLA down to its final out of the season at the Women’s College World Series (June 1) … walked three times, singled and scored a run against No. 14 South Carolina in the NCAA Super Regional title game (May 25) … went 2-for-3 with a solo homer and RBI single versus UC Santa Barbara in the NCAA Regional title game (May 18) … logged a two-RBI single versus San Diego State in NCAA Regionals (May 17) … hit a two-run homer against UC Santa Barbara in the NCAA Regional opener (May 16) … went 2-for-4 with a double and run scored in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals versus Indiana (May 8) … hit a three-run homer in the season opener versus IU Indianapolis (Feb. 7) … hit a three-run homer against Lehigh (Feb. 8) … logged back-to-back three-RBI and two-hit performances versus No. 9 Oklahoma State and Charlotte at the Clearwater Invitational (Feb. 14) … homered and doubled off Oklahoma State and doubled twice against Charlotte … homered against Notre Dame at the Judi Garman Classic (Feb. 27) … homered the next game with a two-run shot off Utah (Feb. 28) … drove in five RBIs in a 2-for-2 performance with a home run against Weber State (March 1) … hit a go-ahead three-run homer in the top of the seventh versus No. 12 Arizona (March 1) … hit a three-run homer versus LMU (March 6) … went 2-for-3 with three RBIs via home run and single versus Sacramento State (March 7) … walked twice and homered again off Sacramento State the next game (March 8) … hit a game-tying two-run homer in the bottom of the fourth in the series finale versus Purdue (March 16) … homered twice and went 3-for-3 with four RBIs and three runs scored in the series opener at Iowa (March 22) … recorded six RBIs in a 2-for-3 effort with a home run and double at Maryland (March 28) … hit a three-run homer the next day in game two at Maryland (March 29) … totaled career-high seven RBIs off a grand slam and three-run homer in game one against No. 21 Ohio State (April 4) … her grand slam walked it off in five innings against the Buckeyes … hit another grand slam two days later at Cal Baptist (April 8) … hit a third grand slam and homered twice for five total RBIs the next day in game one versus Washington (April 11) … went 2-for-2 with a home run in game two against the Huskies (April 12) … capped the Washington series with a solo blast, marking her fourth straight game with a homer and seventh homer over the last six games (Apri 13) … doubled and scored a run in a game two victory at No. 5 Oregon (April 19) … went 2-for-3 with a two-run dinger in the series finale at Michigan (April 28) … registered a .989 fielding percentage (259 putouts, 20 assists and three errors).
2024
Grant was named to the All-Pac-12 First Team and NFCA All-West Region Second Team in her sophomore season … ranked third on the team with a .335 batting average (56-for-167), 30 extra-base hits and 41 RBIs … totaled eight home runs, 11 doubles, one triple and 27 runs scored … recorded a .406 on-base percentage and .557 slugging percentage … was one of four Bruins to start all 55 games … started 42 games in right field, nine games at first base and four games in left field … ranked second on the team with 16 multi-hit games
and third with 11 multi-RBI games … had a season-long nine-game hitting streak from March 12-April 5 … bashed two grand slams … had a season-high three hits on two occasions … drew 20 walks … went 3-for-4 with two doubles and two runs scored against No. 7 Florida State at the Clearwater Invitational (Feb. 16) … went 2-for-3 and drove in the game-winning RBI against No. 24 Northwestern at the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic (Feb. 23) … went 3-for-4 and drove in all three of UCLA’s runs with an RBI single and two-RBI double against Baylor (Feb. 24) … went 2-for-3 with a homer and three RBI against Michigan at the Judi Garman Classic (March 1) … hit a two-run homer versus DePaul (March 2) … went 2-for-3 with an RBIs versus San Jose State (March 3) … logged a two-RBI triple in game two of a double-header versus LMU (March 16) … hit a grand slam against No. 24 Oregon (March 29) … went 2-for-4 with two RBIs in game one versus Oregon State (April 5) … doubled in all three games in UCLA’s series sweep of then-Pac-12 leader and fifth-ranked Stanford (April 19-21) … went 2-for-4 and doubled off USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year NiJaree Canady to lead off the ninth inning against Stanford, and her pinch runner came around to score the game-winning run (April 19) … logged an RBI double to put UCLA’s first runs on the board in game two against Stanford (April 20) … homered in a game one victory over No. 19 Arizona (April 26) … homered to break up a perfect game in the fifth inning and spark UCLA’s seven-run comeback against rival Arizona on Senior Day (April 28) … went 2-for-4 with a grand slam and season-high six RBIs at CSUN (April 30) … homered and scored two runs in game two at Arizona State (May 4) … hit a two-RBI double against Arizona State in the Pac-12 Tournament quarterfinals (May 9) … doubled twice in an NCAA Super Regional win against No. 15 Virginia Tech; also drew a walk in the seventh inning which resulted in the game-tying run (May 18) … homered against No. 8 Stanford at the Women’s College World Series (June 2).
2023
Grant was named an NFCA Second Team All-American and to the NFCA Freshman of the Year Top 10 List in her first season … also earned All-Pac-12 and NFCA All-West Region First Team honors … selected to the Pac-12 All-Freshman Team … garnered Softball America and D1Softball All-America Third Team acclaim … started in 58 games … ranked fourth on the team with a .333 batting average and .415 on-base percentage ... led UCLA with 14 doubles and ranked second with 15 homers, 58 RBIs, 31 extra-base hits and a .695 slugging percentage … played six different positions … made 31 starts at third base, 16 starts in right field, five at first base, three at shortstop, two as the designated player and one in left field … ranked second among all NCAA freshmen in RBIs (58) … led all Pac-12 freshmen in RBI (58), home runs (15), slugging percentage (.695) and doubles (14) … Pac-12 overall ranks: tied for second in doubles (14), third in RBIs (58), fourth in homers (15) and fifth in slugging percentage (.695) … ranked 19th overall in the NCAA in RBIs (58) … recorded 14 multi-hit games and 15 multi-RBI games … bat leadoff in the last 25 games of the season (26 total) … belted three leadoff home runs … combined for 104 RBIs with Jordan Woolery which is the most by a freshman duo in program history … recorded UCLA’s longest hitting streak with 14 straight games from March 18-April 16 (.419 AVG, 18-for-43, 15 RBI, 6 HR, 10 R, 2 2B) … in conference play, tied with Maya Brady for the Pac-12 lead in homers (9) … hit for a .403 batting average in conference play … two-time Pac-12 Freshman of the Week … recorded her first-career two-homer game and first-career grand slam in the same game at No. 24 Arizona, earning her Pac-12 Freshman of the Week (April 16) … recorded the first two hits (single and double) and RBI of her career in the season opener versus Cal State Fullerton (Feb. 9) … had a three-RBI game the next day with a sacrifice fly and two-RBI single versus CSU Bakersfield (Feb. 10) … smashed her first-career homer versus CSU Bakersfield (Feb. 11) … hit the mercy-rule walk-off double for a total of three RBI versus Nebraska at the Clearwater Invitational (Feb. 16) … came up clutch with a go-ahead two-RBI single to right field on an 0-2 count in the seventh inning versus No. 6 Florida State (Feb. 18) … later that day, hit a two-RBI single to put the Bruins on the board versus No. 8 Virginia Tech (Feb. 18) … recorded an RBI double and RBI single versus No. 3 Florida at the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic (Feb. 23) … hit a sacrifice fly and RBI triple versus No. 18 Kentucky (Feb. 24) … homered versus No. 19 Northwestern (Feb. 25) … recorded her first four-hit performance and was a triple shy of the cycle versus Michigan at the Judi Garman Classic (March 4) … recorded an RBI double at Cal State Fullerton (March 5) … went 3-for-4 with a double and three RBI at California (March 10) … hit a two-run homer in game three at California (March 12) … homered in games two and three versus No. 10 Washington (March 18-19) … launched her first leadoff homer off the second pitch of the game and later tripled versus No. 6 Stanford (April 2) … smashed a three-run homer and hit a two-RBI single for five total RBIs versus Oregon State (April 7) … went 4-for-4 (solo HR, three-RBI 2B) with four RBIs and was a triple shy of the cycle in game one versus Arizona State (April 21) … went 2-for-4 the next game with an RBI double and RBI single versus Arizona State (April 22) … hit her second leadoff homer of the year and double in game three at No. 23 Utah (April 30) … launched a game-tying solo home run in the fifth inning at Arizona in the Pac-12 Tournament quarterfinals (May 11) … homered in each of UCLA’s two NCAA Regional games versus Grand Canyon and Liberty (May 19-20) … her homer versus Liberty led off the game (May 20).
High School
Grant was a three-sport star, lettering in softball, volleyball and basketball at Aragon High School (San Mateo, Calif.) … a four-time member of the SportsStars’ Bay Area Top 75 Athlete yearly rankings, she finished her high school career ranked as the No. 3 overall athlete – across all sports – in the Bay Area … selected all four years to the Peninsula Athletic League (PAL) First Team and named 2022 PAL Co-Player of the Year … as a senior in 2022, was selected to both the San Francisco Chronicle’s 2022 All-Metro First Team and Mercury News’ All-Bay Area Softball First Team and was named The Daily Journal Girls Athlete of the Year … that season, she notched 22 RBIs and 23 hits, including four doubles and six homers, for a .511 batting average … ranked as the No. 2 overall recruit in the country by Extra Inning Softball, No. 12 by MaxPreps and No. 20 by FloSoftball … named to the Cal-Hi Sports All-State Second Team and Mercury News’ Fab 40 High School Softballers in 2021 after leading her team to the CIF Central California Section semifinals, hitting for a .706 batting average (24-for-34), .836 on-base percentage, 1.794 slugging percentage, 31 RBIs, eight home runs, seven doubles and three triples … in her freshman 2019 season, was honored as one of the San Francisco Chronicle’s softball regional players of the year after recording a .500 batting average with 51 RBIs, 33 runs scored and 42 hits, including 13 home runs and 11 doubles … captured the 2021 Alliance Fastpitch National Championship with her travel ball team, the West Bay Warriors.
Personal
Born Megan Rose-LeDee Grant in Daly City, Calif. … parents are Christine and Shawn Grant … has two brothers, Devin and Camron … Devin played football at College of Idaho … Camron played baseball at Skyline College, Louisiana-Monroe and Oklahoma Baptist … chose to attend UCLA for its “elite academics and athletics” … athlete she admires most is Kobe Bryant … hobbies include playing video games … favorite baseball team is the San Francisco Giants … favorites include crepes, the movie Twilight and actress Kristen Stewart … majoring in sociology.
PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES
2024-25
GABRIELA JAQUEZ 11
6-0 / Senior Guard
Camarillo, Calif. Camarillo HS
A career year for the junior, starting 33 of her 36 appearances… Averaged career-bests in field goal percentage (.523 FG%) and 3-point percentage (.348 3FG%)… Scored 9.6 points and collected 5.3 rebounds per game, playing 23.0 minutes per appearance… Finished the year with 34 turnovers, less than one per game… Had multiple turnovers in just eight games during her junior campaign… Put together a strong fourth quarter (11 PTS, 5-6 FG) to help close out the win against No. 8 Ohio State on Feb. 5… Scored UCLA’s first basket off a layup in each of the Bruins’ three wins at the 2025 Big Ten Tournament…. Got into double figures 15 times this season, including a season-high 23 points against Nebraska in the opening round of the conference tournament… Recorded a double-double against No. 25 Baylor (11 points, 13 rebounds, 5-8 FG)… Showed marked improvement at the free throw line, shooting .826 at the charity stripe this year… Honors: Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll… Rainbow Wahine Showdown All-Tournament Team… Spokane 1 Regional All-Region Team… All-Big Ten Honorable Mention (Media)
2023-24
A vital part of UCLA’s depth, Jaquez provided 10.0 points, 5.6 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game off the bench… Appeared in 34 games, making six starts… Played 25.2 minutes per game… Captured her first-career 30-point game when she had 30 points and 12 rebounds against Bellarmine on Nov. 12… Her first of three double-doubles this season (10 points, 11 rebounds vs. Arkansas – Dec. 3; 21 points, 15 rebounds vs. Arizona – Feb. 9)… Set new single-game career highs in points, rebounds, assists, 3-pointers and free throws made.
2022-23
Made two starts during her freshman campaign… Appeared in all 37 games for the Bruins, averaging 17.4 minutes per contest… Led the team in scoring twice (13 points at Washington State, Jan. 22; 14 points vs. Oregon State, Feb. 10) on her way to 6.3 points per game… Finished the season with 234 points and 128 rebounds… Shot a team-leading 45.5% from the field (min. 1 attempt/game)… Led the Bruins on the boards three times during her freshman campaign (9 vs. Cal State Fullerton, Dec. 10; 6 at Oregon, Dec. 30; 5 vs. Washington State, March 5)… Provided a key spark and energy off the bench… Had a season-high 5 steals in the effort at Utah on Jan. 29, finishing the campaign with 32 steals.
HIGH SCHOOL
Played high school ball for Adolfo Camarillo… Averaged 24.2 ppg, 13.2 rpg, 3.5 steals and 2.1 assists over her career… Put up an impressive 34.2 points per game, 15.7 rebounds, 4.7 steals and 2.6 assists during her senior year… Named the Ventura County Sports Hall of Fame female athlete of the year for the 2021-22 school year… Earned All-CIF Division 1 honors her senior year… Named MVP of the 2021-22 Coastal Canyon League and First Team All-Coastal Canyon League… Named to the 2022 McDonald’s All-American Girls’ Team… Shared co-MVP honors of the McDonald’s All-American
game with teammate Kiki Rice… Played in the 2022 Jordan Brand Classic with Rice and Londynn Jones… Ranked the 19th-best player in espnW’s HoopGurlz rankings, earning five stars in the class of 2022… Part of UCLA’s No. 1-ranked recruiting class… Played club for Troop West and Cal Stars… Won the Nike Girls EYBL National Championship in 2021 with Cal Stars… Named MVP of EYBL Nike Nationals after averaging 21.3 ppg, 9.9 rpg and 1 spg in a 6-0 run in the championship tournament.
PERSONAL
Born in Irvine, Calif., to Angela and Jaime Jaquez… Both parents played basketball at Concordia University… Older brother, Jaime, plays basketball for UCLA… Has a younger brother, Marcos… Chose to become a Bruin because “I wanted to attend UCLA since I was a kid. I really wanted to go to a school where I could get the best education. I knew I wanted to be close to home so that my family could come watch my games too” … Lists Kobe Bryant as a famous athlete she most admires… Describes her greatest athletic achievement as playing in the Nike Nationals championship game, saying, “it was so fun when our team rushed the court and cheered when we won” … Wants to play in the WNBA after her college career is complete… Always has to take a nap before games… Off the court, she enjoys heading to the beach and hanging out with her friends… Undeclared major.
CHRISTINA KARAMOUZI
6-0 / Freshman Guard
Stockholm, Sweden
Prior to UCLA… at Utah (2021-2025)
2024-25 (Senior)
GIANNA KNEEPKENS 8
6-0 / Graduate Student Guard
Duluth, Minn.
Duluth Marshall HS / Utah
A Cheryl Miller Award Top 10 Candidate, and named to the Naismith Trophy Player of the Year Midseason Team as well as named to the USBWA Ann Meyers Drysdale Player of the Year Midseason Watchlist… Named Big 12 Player of the Week after posting backto-back 30 point games including a career-high 32 points against BYU (1/25)… Against Kansas, Kneepkens was on the brink of a triple-double as she combined 30 points with 10 rebounds, for her first double-double of the season; also posted a season-high eight assists… Logged three 30 point games this season. Most recently she tied her careerhigh 32 points against UCF (2/8/25)… Hit nine other 20-point games this season with the most recent when she scored 23 points against Texas Tech (3/6/25)…. Knocked down three or more three pointers in 17 games this season and Utah was 14-3 in those games… Averaged 19.3 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 3.03 apg and 1.03 spg… Shot 50.4 percent from the field, 44.8 percent from the three and 89.0 percent from the line… Led the team in made three pointers (94-of-210) and made free throws (121-of-136)… Ranked No. 16 in the NCAA in free throw percentage (89.0)… Finished the season at No. 44 in the nation in scoring with 599 total points on the season and No. 29 in points per game with 19.3… Ended the season in the Top 15 in every three point shooting category… No. 12 in the nation in three pointers made with 94, No. 12 in the nation in three point percentage (44.8) and No. 8 in the nation in three pointers made per game (3.03)… Had 248 total made three pointers in her Utah career… Sits at No. 3 on the school all-time threes made list… Became the seventh Ute in school history to hit the 200 milestone… Hit 1,000 career points when she put up 19 against Carroll College (11/28/23)… She now has 1,621 career points… Has recorded four double-doubles in her career, most recently against Arizona State (2/15/25) with 24 points and a season-high 12 rebounds. Before that against Kansas (1/22/25) she had 30 points and 10 rebounds. Previously, both occurred in the 2022-23 season, against Cal (1/22) with 20 points and 10 rebounds and Washington State (2/12), she recorded a career high 13 rebounds and put up 14 points.
2023-24 (Junior)
Played and started in eight games before suffering a season ending injury… Was a Pac12 Preseason All-Conference selection… Earned spots on the watchlists for the Wooden Award, Naismith Trophy and Ann Meyers Drysdale Award… Hit 1,000 career points when she put up 19 against Carroll College (Nov. 28)… Against EKU put up 16 points in just the third quarter, going 5-5 from the field, 4-4 from the three and 2-2 from the free throw line… Knocked down three or more three-pointers in all but one game his season, against Mississippi Valley State (4), South Carolina State (4), Baylor (3), Alaska Anchorage (4), EKU (5) and Carroll (3)… Averaged 17.8 ppg, 5.5 rpg, 3.85 apg and 2.0 spg… Shot 63.3% from the field, 54.0% from the three and 78.9% from the line.
2022-23 (Sophomore)
Earned WBCA Honorable Mention All-American and named to the Pac-12 First Team AllConference… Earned First Team All-Conference for the second time in her career… Was a Top 5 Candidate for the Cheryl Miller Award… Started in all 32 games and averaged 28.3 minutes, 15.3 points, and 5.2 rebounds per game… Scored in double figures in all but seven games this season… Scored 20 or more points seven times, including a season high 28 points in the 84-78 win over No. 3 Stanford… Hit a three-pointer in 27-of-32 games, including a season high of five made three’s on two separate occasions… Finished the
season at third in the Pac-12 and 16th nationally at 42.3 percent from three-point range… Recorded her first career double-double against Cal on Jan. 22 and later posted a career high 13 rebounds for her second double-double with 14 points against Washington State on Feb. 12… Led the team in scoring 10 times… Shot 49.8 percent (160-for-321) from the field on the season, the fourth-best mark in the Pac-12… Was an 83.1 percent (98for-118) from the free-throw line… Named to the Naismith Award Watch List.
2021-22 (Freshman)
Was named the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, First Team All-Pac-12, and Pac-12 AllFreshman honors… Just the second player in Utah history to earn Pac-12 Freshman of the Year honors… Was named Pac-12 Freshman of the Week honors five times, tied for the most by one player during the 2021-22 season… Appeared in 33 games while making 25 starts and averaged 23.7 minutes, 11.8 points, and 4.4 rebounds per game… Scored a career-high 29 points off the bench against BYU (12/5)… Hit a three-pointer in 29-of-33 games, including hitting at least one three-pointer in 22 straight games (12/21 – 3/18)… Led the team in scoring 11 times during her freshman season while scoring in double-figures in 20 contests… Shot 38.4 percent (56-for-146) on three-pointers on the season, the ninth-best mark in the Pac-12… Was an 87.1 percent (61-for-70) from the free-throw line. This is the ninth-best mark in a single season in school history.
High School
Became just the 12th player in Minnesota Prep girls basketball history to score 3,000+ career points out of Duluth Marshall HS, finishing with 3,704 which ranks fourth alltime… Four-star recruit on Prospect Nation… Prep Girls Hoops Class AA Player of the Year and News Tribune All-Area Player of the Year as a senior… Three-time all-state, and all-area, four-time all-conference… Set the state tournament record for points in a game, dropping 67 in the state tournament in 2021 where she averaged 43.1 points per game… Averaged 31.2 points, 11.5 rebounds, 5.8 steals and 4.6 assists per game as a junior… Led Duluth Marshall to its first state tournament in 20 years… Played AAU for the Minnesota Fury, winning two state championships while playing second at the AAU Under Armour Nationals… Was also a two-time all-conference and all-state soccer player.
Personal
Daughter of Donald and Betsy … has five brothers … was her high school’s class president.
2024-25
Did not appear for the Bruins.
Prior to UCLA…
2023-24 (at Washington State)
CHARLISSE LEGER-WALKER 5
5-10 / Graduate Student Guard
Waikato, New Zealand St. Peter’s School Cambridge | Washington State
All-Pac-12 (Coaches & Media) … Aurthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar of the Year Second Runner-Up … Anne Meyers Drysdale Award Midseason Top-10 Finalist … Seattle Sports Star Awards Woman of the Year Finalist … Jersey Mike’s Naismith National Player of the Year Award Midseason Top-30 Finalist … John Wooden Award Top-50 Watch List … Cancun Challenge Tournament MVP … Preseason All-Pac-12 … Started in 21 games for the Cougars before a season-ending knee injury at UCLA (Jan. 28) … recorded two triple-doubles, her first in her collegiate career … first was 11 points, 15 rebounds, 13 assists against Maryland (Nov. 23) … second was 15 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists against Houston (Dec. 17) … became just second player in program history to record a triple-double after Penny Bowden also had her only two triple-doubles in the 1987-88 season … averaged 13.2 points, 6.5 rebounds, 5.1 assists and 1.7 steals in 33.3 minutes per game … shot 40.6 percent from the field … scored a season-high 26 points against Gonzaga (Nov. 9) … her 15 rebounds and 13 assists against Maryland (11/23) were both career-highs … surpassed the 1,500 career points scored and 3,500 career minutes played in her final season with the Cougs … in the program’s all-time career record books, finished third in career points (1,743), fourth in points per game (16.6), fifth in made field goals (607), second in made threes (199), fifth in made free throws (330), fourth in assists (389), T-10th in double-doubles (11), ninth in games started (105) and third in minutes played (3,794).
2022-23 (at Washington State)
Associated Press All-American – Honorable Mention … WBCA All-American – Honorable Mention … CSC Academic All-American – Second Team … 2023 Pac-12 Tournament Most Outstanding Player … All-Pac-12 (Coaches & Media) … All-Pac-12 Defensive Team - Honorable Mention… Anne Meyers Drysdale Award Midseason Top-10 Finalist … Jersey Mike’s Naismith National Player of the Year Award Midseason Top-30 Finalist … Pac-12 Player of the Week - Nov. 14 … Started in all 30 games she appeared in as a junior … Became the third WSU player to score 40 points in a game, as she had a career-high 40-point performance at Washington (Dec. 11) … Leger-Walker’s 40-point performance at Washington ties her with Jeanne Eggart for the secondmost points scored in a game in Washington State history, just one-point shy of Jenni Ruff’s program record of 41 points … Led the team in scoring for the third-straight season at 17.7 points per game … Leger-Walker’s 17.7 points per game ranked third-best in the Pac-12 Conference and was the 40th best scoring average in NCAA Division I … Her 4.1 assists per game led the team and were the second-best assist per game average in the Pac-12 … Shot a career-best 40.3 percent from the field during her junior season … Leger-Walker’s 68 3-point field goals made led the team and ranked fifth in the Pac-12 … Leger-Walker’s 68 3-point field goals made ranks fourth on WSU’s single-season 3-point field goals made list … Shot a career-best 34.9 percent on 3-point shots … Scored her 1,000th career point at Washington State against Prairie View A&M (Nov. 13) … Tied Jeanne Eggart for the fastest to 1,000 career points at Washington State, accomplishing the feat in 57 games … Moved into the top-10 on WSU’s all-time scoring list this season, as Leger-Walker currently sits in ninth place on the all-time scoring list with 1,465 career points … Scored 530 points this season to become the ninth WSU player in program history to score 500 or more points in a season … Her 530 points scored in 2022-23 are the ninth-most points scored in a single season by a WSU player … Leger-Walker’s 27 games with double-digit points are the fourth-most double-digit scoring games collected by a junior in program history … Had five games where she hit five or more 3-point field goals … Hit a career-best seven 3-poitnt field goals in her 40-point performance at Washington (Dec. 11), which is tied for the second-most 3-point field goals made in a game in program history … Leger-Walker began the season on a 16-game double-digit scoring streak, which is the fourth-longest scoring streak posted by a junior in program history … Scored 20 or more points in 11 games this season, which is the fifth-most 20-point games collected by a junior in WSU history … Scored 35 points at San Francisco (Nov. 11) … Leger-Walker is one of three players to have a 35-point and a 40-point scoring performance during the 2022-23 season … Collected two double-doubles on the year, posting her first one with a 17-point, 10-rebound effort at No. 25/25 Colorado then had a 17-point, 10-rebound performance in the double-overtime loss at Southern California (Feb. 25) in the regular season finale … Named the Most Outstanding Player at the 2023 Pac-12 Tournament after scoring a Pac-12 Tournament record 76 points in four games to help Washington State win the program’s first-ever Pac-12 Women’s Basketball Championship … Scored a game-high 23 points in the Pac-12 Championship game win over UCLA (March 5) en route to becoming the first WSU player in program history to be named Pac-12 Tournament Most Outstanding Player … Named to the Pac-12 Winter Academic Honor Roll.
2021-22 | Sophomore
WBCA All-American – Honorable Mention ... 2021-22 All-Pac-12 … 2021-22 Anne Meyers Drysdale Award Top-10 Finalist … Pac-12 Player of the Week - Dec. 12 … 2021-22 Naismith Trophy Preseason Watch List … 2021-22 John. R. Wooden Award Player of the Year Preseason Watch List … Finished second in the Pac-12 in total points scored with 483 … Had 11 games with 20-or-more points, which led the Pac-12 … Named Pac-12 Player of the Week on Dec. 13 after averaging 18.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.5 steals and 2.5 assists in a pair of come-from-behind wins at Gonzaga (51-49) on Dec. 8 and at home against Boise State (62-55) on Dec. 12 … Her 16.1 points per game lead the team and was the fourth-highest scoring average in the Pac-12 … Finished second in the Pac-12 in field goals made with 176 … Scored a career-high 30 points in a win at Colorado on Feb. 4 … Her 1,080 minutes played led the Pac-12, while her 36.00 minutes per game tied for first in the Pac-12 … Pulled down a career-high 14 rebounds in the Bahamas in a win over Miami (Fla.) on Nov. 25 … Recorded a double-double with 13 points and 14 rebounds against Miami (Fla.) on Nov. 25 … Dished out three-or-more assists in 15 games … Handed out a season-best seven assists on March. 3 in the quarterfinals of the Pac-12 Tournament vs. Utah … Finished second on the team in 3-point field goals made with 52 … Made a career-high six 3-point field goals at BYU on Dec. 18 … Her 25 blocks were the second-most on the team … Collected a career-best four blocks on Feb. 6 at Utah … Led the team in free throw percentage at 76.0 percent … Named to the 2022 Pac-12 Winter Academic Honor Roll.
2020-21 | Freshman
2020-21 Pac-12 Freshman of the Year ... WBCA All-American – Honorable Mention ... USBWA All-American - Honorable Mention ... 2020-21 All-Pac-12 Team ... 2020-21 All-Pac-12 Freshman Team ... 7x Pac-12 Freshman of the Week ... Named the 17th best player on ESPN’s Top-25 Players list for the 2021-22 season ... Became the 22nd player in Pac-12 history to be named to both the All-Pac-12 and All-Pac-12 Freshman teams ... Named Pac-12 Freshman of the Week a program-record seven times … Named the USBWA Tamika Catchings National Freshman of the Week on Jan. 11 after scoring the game-tying and game-winning baskets against No. 7/10 Arizona on Jan. 10 … Started in all 24 games as a true freshman … Finished the regular season as the top points scorer in the Pac-12 with 434 points … Led the team in scoring at 18.8 points per game and steals at 2.3 steals per game … Finished second in the Pac-12 in free throws made (103) free throws attempted (131) and minutes played (908:49) … Ranked third in the Pac-12 in steals (54), steals per game (2.25), 3-point field goal attempts (174) field goal attempts (414) and fifth in field goals made (46) and 3-point field goals made (57) … Scored a career-high 29 points in three different games, the first coming on Dec. 13 against Idaho, then again on Jan. 15 at USC and once more on Feb. 14 at Arizona State … Collected two double-doubles on the year … Became the first WSU freshman to ever post a double-double via points and assists with 16 points and 10 assists at Colorado on Jan. 3 … The 10 assists handed out against the Buffaloes ties Leger-Walker with four other players for the second-most assists by a Washington State freshman in a single game … Set the program’s single-game record for most field goals in a game with 29 field goal attempts in the double-overtime win at Oregon State on Jan. 24 … Tied the program’s single-game record for most 3-point field goal attempts with 14 shots from behind the arc in at Oregon on Jan. 22 … Her 37.9 minutes per game is the highest minutes-per-game average by a player in a single season in WSU history … Set the WSU freshman single-game record for most minutes played on Jan. 24 in double-overtime win at Oregon State, playing a career-high 47 minutes … Set a WSU freshman record for most 20-point games with 12 … Her 18.8 points per game a Washington State freshman record for highest scoring average … Her 103 free throws are the most made by a freshman in program history … Her 78.6 percent success rate from the charity stripe is the second-highest free throw percentage by a WSU freshman … Set the Washington State freshman record for most free throws made in a game with 10, a mark she hit twice during the season. The first 10-free-throw performance came in her WSU debut at Washington on Dec. 11 then against on Feb. 5 in a win over No. 5/4 UCLA.
New Zealand National Program
Leger-Walker is the youngest player to ever lace up for the New Zealand women’s national basketball team, having joined the Tall Ferns at just 16 years old ... Played for New Zealand at the 2021 FIBA Women’s Basketball Asia Cup, along side her sister and fellow Coug, Krystal ...Was the youngest player at the FIBA Women’s Basketball Asia Cup .... Finished second on the Tall Ferns in points (11.0 ppg) and assists (3.0 asp) at the Asia Cup ... ... In 2018, she helped her homeland win bronze at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast, Australia ... More recently, she played for New Zealand at the 2019 Women’s Olympic Pre-Qualifying AsiaOceania Tournament in Auckland, New Zealand. The guard scored eight points and dished out seven assists in a win over the Philippines and helped the Tall Ferns post a 2-1 record in the tournament ... In June of 2019, Leger-Walker was named to the World All-Star 3 team after leading New Zealand to a silver-medal finish at the U18 3x3 World Championships in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. It marked the first time any female team from New Zealand has won a medal at a FIBA-sanctioned World tournament.
High School
Leger-Walker led her high school, St. Peter’s School Cambridge, to four New Zealand National High School Championships ... Earned team MVP honors four times ... In April of 2019, she guided St. Peter’s to a fifth-place finish at the International School Sport Federation (ISF) World Championships in Greece, a tournament that features the best prep schools throughout the world ... Leger-Walker’s play at the 2019 ISF World Championships earned her a spot on the World All-Star Five.
Personal
Charlisse is the daughter of Eliu and Leanne ... Mother was a member of the Tall Ferns and played in the 2000 and 2004 Olympics ... Has two sisters, Krystal who played for Washington State women’s basketball team from 2019-21, and Tannika. ... Played netball and touch rugby at St. Peter’s Cambrige, and won a National Championship in netball during her senior season ... Born on September 15 ... Majored in Business at Washington State.
2024-25
AMANDA MUSE 33
6-4 / Redshirt-Sophomore Forward
Brentwood, Calif. Heritage HS
Did not appear for the Bruins… Honors: Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll
2023-24
Played 19 games for the Bruins during her freshman campaign… Averaged 7.7 minutes on the floor in her appearances… Had 12 blocks on the season (0.6 BPG), including a career-high three rejections against Niagara on Nov. 25… Also shot 5-for-6 from the free throw line in that late-November game en route to a career-high nine points.
HIGH SCHOOL
Attended Heritage High School… Played varsity basketball and water polo all four years… Two-time All-BVAL First Team in water polo (2021, 2022)… Named a 2023 McDonald’s All American… Earned BVAL Girls Basketball MVP (2022), two-time All-BVAL First in basketball (2020, 2021)… Scored over 1,000 points, grabbed over 750 rebounds, and recorded more than 250 blocks in her high school career… Played club ball for Cal Stars, winning the 2021 Boo Williams and Nike National Championships…
PERSONAL
Parents Amy and Douglas both played college basketball at UC Santa Barbara, and professionally overseas in Portugal… Has two siblings, older sister Abigail and younger brother Aidan… Abigail attends and plays college basketball at Boise State…
Chose UCLA “because of the incredible team culture and coaching staff, along with an elite level of education and basketball”… Lists Sabrina Ionescu and Michael Jordan as athletes she admires… Describes her greatest athletic thrill, saying, “Winning a Nike National Championship was so incredible and I loved playing a role on that team and in that game”… Also describes the McDonald’s All American Game as “a blast” and says, “it was so much fun to perform at that high of a level with the best in the country”… Off the court, enjoys reading, walking, swimming, the beach, watching the sunset and spending time with friends… Something fans might not know is that she drives a stick-shift Jeep.
2024-25
5-11 / Senior Guard
Bethesda,
Md. Sidwell Friends
Missed three games to start the year due to injury… Returned to action against Arkansas on Nov. 17… Started against South Carolina on Nov. 24, her first of 33-consecutive starts… Appeared in 34 games, averaging 28.4 minutes per game… UCLA’s second leading scorer with 12.8 points per game… Shot career-bests from the floor (.485 FG%) and from long range (.365 3FG%)… Team leader in assists (170) and assists per game (5.0 APG) for the Bruins… Surpassed 100 assists for the third-consecutive season… Notched a pair of double-doubles this season (16 PTS, 10 AST vs. No. 24 Michigan - Jan. 1; 10 PTS, 10 AST at Rutgers – Jan. 23)… Received the Elite 90 award at the Final Four on April 2, which is given to the student-athlete with the highest GPA at each of the 90 NCAA championship events each year… Totaled 32 assists in five games at the 2025 NCAA tournament, leading all student-athletes… Honors: Big Ten Winter Academic Honor Roll… Rainbow Wahine Showdown All-Tournament Team… First Team All-Big Ten… Big Ten Sportsmanship Honoree… Associated Press All-America Honorable Mention… WBCA AllAmerica Honorable Mention… 2025 Nancy Lieberman Point Guard of the Year Finalist… Elite 90 Award… Arthur Ashe Jr. Award Sports Scholar, women’s basketball sport winner… NCAA Spokane 1 Regional All-Region Team
2023-24
Recorded the first triple-double of her college career, the tenth in UCLA program history, when she had 14 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists vs. CSUN on Dec. 7… Set new single-game career highs in points (25), rebounds (11), steals (7)… Improved all her shooting percentages, finishing her sophomore campaign with a .449/.312/.876 split... Led the Bruins in assists (152), free throws made (106) and defensive rebounds (172)… Second on the team in steals (48), trailing only Charisma Osborne (55)… Appeared in all 34 games and made every start, recording the second-most minutes per game (31.2 minutes)… Debuted her player exclusive (PE) signature shoe, the Air Jordan 38 Low “Cherry Blossom,” against Stanford on Feb. 4, becoming the first NIL student-athlete to create a basketball PE with Jordan Brand… Featured in the ESPN+ original series “Full Court Press,” which also followed Iowa’s Caitlin Clark and South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso during the 2023-24 season… Honors: All-Pac-12 (Coaches)… All-Pac-12 (Media)… Associated Press All-America Honorable Mention.
2022-23
Started 36 of her 37 appearances during her first year with the Bruins, averaging 11.6 points in 28.1 minutes per game… Scored 20+ in consecutive games against Oregon (21 pts, Dec. 30) and Oregon State (20 pts, Jan. 1)… Had 25 games in double-digit scoring… First freshman since Jordin Canada to have 400+ points, 100+ assists and 100+ made free throws in her inaugural season at UCLA… Scored 22 points with five assists and five boards to down No. 1-seed Stanford in the Pac-12 Tournament semifinal game (W, 69-65, Mar. 3). Shot 7-for-8 from the free throw line in the fourth quarter, scoring 11 total points in the final frame against The Cardinal… Led UCLA in free throws made (121 FTM) on 79.1% shooting from the line… Grabbed 4.5 rebounds and dished out 3.0 assists per game… Finished the season with 45 steals (1.2 spg) and a 1.8 assist/turnover ratio… Pac-12 Statistical Ranks: 12th in minutes played (1,034 min.), first among freshmen in the Conference… 14th in total points scored (430 PTS), highest for a Pac-12 freshman in 2022-23… Tenth in assists (111 AST), second among freshman… Tied for thirdmost free throws made in the Conference (121 FTM), matches Raegan Beers (Oregon State, 121 FTM) for most FTM by a first-year player… UCLA Statistical Ranks: Freshman Season Totals: 121 made free throws (2nd all-time), 111 assists (5th all-time), 37 games played (t-1st all-time)… Honors: First Bruin to earn Pac-12 Freshman of the Week since Charisma Osborne (Feb. 24, 2020) when she earned the honor on Dec. 5… Pac-12 All-Freshman (Coaches), Pac-12 All-Freshman (Media)… Pac-12 All-Tournament Team… Battle 4 Atlantis All-Tournament Team.
HIGH SCHOOL
Attended Sidwell Friends where she earned eight varsity letters, four each for basketball and soccer… Named the Gatorade Female Athlete of the Year and the Gatorade National Girls Basketball Player of the Year in 2021-22… Named the All-Metro Player of the Year for basketball in 2021-22… Led Sidwell Friends, ESPN’s No. 1-ranked high school basketball team, to an undefeated season her senior year, capturing her second basketball state championship… Averaged 15.8 points, 7 rebounds, 5.1 assists and 2.7 steals her senior year… Was a McDonald’s All-American in 2021-22 and started for the East… Shared co-MVP in the McDonald’s All-American game with UCLA teammate Gabriela Jaquez… Named the 2022 Naismith High School Player of the Year… Named the 2021-22 MaxPreps National Female High School Athlete of the Year… Ranked No. 2 overall by espnW HoopGurlz (No. 1 among point guards)… Named the Gatorade District of Columbia Player of the Year in basketball in 2019-20… Also named the 2018-19 and 2021-22 Gatorade District of Columbia Girls Soccer Player of the Year… Led the Quakers to two state titles in soccer, scoring 15 goals in her senior year… Played club ball for Fairfax Stars AAU…
USA BASKETBALL
Three-time gold medalist (2019, 2021 and 2022)… Led the 2022 USA Basketball Women’s U18 National Team to a perfect 6-0 record alongside UCLA teammate Londynn Jones… Named tournament MVP and earned All-Star Five recognition after averaging 14.3 points on 49% shooting, adding 4 rebounds and 4 assists to her totals… Poured in 18 points to help lift USA Basketball over Canada in the 2022 gold medal game… Played for the 2021 USA Basketball 3x3 U18 World Cup Team in Debrecen, Hungary and brought home the gold… Represented Team USA at the FIBA U16 Women’s Americas Championship in 2019… Averaged 7.2 ppg, 4.7 rpg and 3.7 apg to help the team to a 6-0 record and secure her first gold medal in Puerto Aysen, Chile.
PERSONAL
Born in San Francisco, Calif., to Andrea and John Rice… Both parents were collegiate athletes at Yale, John played basketball and Andrea played tennis… Full name is Kira Rice but goes by “Kiki” … Grew up in Washington, D.C. with her older brother, Mateo… Admires Damian Lillard, Serena Williams and LeBron James… Chris Williams, her uncle, attended UCLA… Her cousin is former NBA all-star shooting guard Allan Houston… Describes her greatest athletic achievement to date as playing games on ESPN during her senior season… After her playing days are over, she wants to become an NBA general manager… Found her new home at UCLA “because of the opportunity at the school. Along with the great coaches, players, academics and location, I also saw UCLA as the place where I want to help bring a first National Championship” … Favorite hobbies include cooking, hanging out with friends, watching Marvel movies, going to the beach and shopping… Is scuba certified… Undeclared major.
CORI CLOSE
Cori Close was named The Michael Price Family UCLA Women’s Head Basketball Coach on April 21, 2011, and is currently 321-143 (.692) overall. She joins Billie Moore (296181) and Kathy Olivier (232-208) as the only coaches in program history to eclipse the 200-win milestone and became the first to achieve 300-career wins at UCLA.
Close led the Bruins to a historic year of firsts and broken records in 2024-25, earning her a sweep of the national Coach of the Year awards (Associated Press, Naismith, USBWA, and WBCA). UCLA went 34-3 and made its first-ever trip to the NCAA Final Four after capturing the 2025 TIAA Big Ten Women’s Basketball Championship. The Bruins downed a No. 1-ranked team for the first time, handling South Carolina on Nov. 24, 2024 (W, 77-62). UCLA went on to capture its first No. 1 ranking by the Associated Press (AP) and set a new Big Ten Conference record with 12-consecutive weeks atop the AP poll. The Bruins were ranked No. 1 by the AP for 14 of the 19 weeks in the 2024-25 season; UCLA also set single-season records for most wins (34), consecutive wins (23) and consecutive wins by a double-digit margin (22).
UCLA saw its second-consecutive 27-win season in the 2023-24 campaign, tying the third-most wins in a season in UCLA program history. Close helped lead the Bruins past UConn for the first time when UCLA downed then-No. 6 UConn 78-67 in the Cayman Islands Classic. UCLA also reached its highest ranking in program history, sitting at No. 2 in the Associated Press Top 25 Women’s Basketball Poll for nine weeks during the season. The 2023-24 Bruins made a run to the Sweet Sixteen for the second-consecutive year under Close’s guidance; UCLA has reached at least the second round of the NCAA tournament in seven of the last nine seasons. UCLA crashed the boards as directed by Close and led the NCAA in rebounding margin (+13.9) for the 2023-24 season.
Close brought in her second top-rated recruiting class ahead of the 2022-23 season and immediately utilized the young talent alongside the veteran core. The five freshmen each played an average of 19.0 minutes per game once they arrived in Westwood, the most of any freshman class in the NCAA. The Bruins recorded 13 wins in their first 14 games to begin the season. It was the best start for the program since the 2019-20 campaign. UCLA captured the Battle 4 Atlantis championship in The Bahamas, taking down Marquette in overtime of the final game of the tournament.
The team led the Pac-12 in offensive rebounds per game (14.9 ORPG) en route to a run at the Pac-12 Tournament championship. UCLA defeated No.-1 seeded Stanford in the Pac-12 semifinals, punching a ticket to the championship game. Senior Charisma Osborne, redshirt-sophomore Emily Bessoir and freshman Kiki Rice earned Pac-12 All-Tournament team for the Conference runner-up efforts; Osborne was named All-Pac-12, and Rice was joined by Londynn Jones on the Pac-12 All-Freshman team. The Bruins returned to the Sweet 16 in NCAA March Madness in postseason play, ending their season against No. 1 seed South Carolina in the Greenville region of the tournament.
The 2021-22 season proved to be “one of the most challenging years of [Close’s] career,” as the Bruins battled injuries and faced postponements and a forfeiture due to COVID-19 protocols. UCLA finished 18-13 overall, but the team managed to catch fire late in the season. Close guided the Bruins to a postseason run in the WNIT, making a trip to the semifinals before falling to South Dakota State. Close led the Bruins through an unpredictable 2020-21 season, a campaign that required Close to navigate COVID-19 protocols and a limited roster. The Bruins posted a 17-6 overall record, picking up wins against five ranked opponents. The Bruins were ranked inside the top 11 of the AP Poll throughout the season and notched the No. 5 spot in November, the highest ranking for the program since 2017. Close guided the Bruins to the Pac-12 Tournament championship game and an eventual three-seed in the NCAA Tournament. It was the sixth NCAA Tournament appearance under Close’s tenure.
Michaela Onyenwere earned AP Third-Team All-American honors for the second-straight year and was selected by the New York Liberty with the sixth pick in the 2021 WNBA Draft. Onyenwere became the sixth Bruin under Close’s tenure to be drafted into the WNBA, and the fifth in four years.
2019-20 was an historic year for Close and the Bruins. UCLA won its first 13 games of the campaign, setting a new program record for the most consecutive wins to start a season. The Bruins’ win over then-No. 6 Stanford marked Close’s 100th-career Pac-12 victory. A win over the Trojans in the Pac-12 Tournament quarterfinals won the Bruins the season series over their crosstown rival. UCLA would, ultimately, finish the year 26-5 and was set to host the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament. The national postseason schedule, however, was canceled due to COVID-19.
Close helped guide the Bruins to a myriad of individual honors during the 2019-20 season. Junior Michaela Onyenwere earned AP Third Team All-America acclaim and also garnered All-Pac-12 recognition. Senior Japreece Dean also earned All-Pac-12 honors while Charisma Osborne picked up Pac-12 All-Freshman accolades. Dean was drafted with the 30th overall pick by the Chicago Sky in the 2020 WNBA Draft, becoming the fifth draft pick across Close’s tenure at the helm.
The 2018-19 season saw UCLA win 13 of its last 17 games and finish fourth in a highly competitive Pac-12 Conference, and Close was ultimately named the Media Pac-12 Coach of the Year. The Bruins collected nine road wins, the most since 2012-13 when the team had 13. UCLA also had seven top-25 wins, including a pair of top-10 wins over then-ranked No. 2 Oregon and No. 9 Maryland. In UCLA’s historic win over the Ducks on Feb. 22, the Bruins overcame a 22-point deficit and secured their biggest win since knocking off No. 2 Stanford in 2008. The loss for Oregon marked its only setback in Eugene that season.
UCLA, which ranked second in the NCAA in offensive rebounds per game (17.3) in 2018-19, ultimately finished 22-13 on the year, reaching the semifinals of the Pac-12 Tournament and collecting NCAA Tournament wins over Tennessee and Maryland, before falling to perennial power UCONN by a final score of 69-61. It was the fourth-straight Sweet 16 appearance for UCLA, making the Bruins one of just eight NCAA Division I programs to do so. In the final ESPN/USA Today rankings, UCLA rose 10 spots to No. 14, the highest leap by any program in the polls. Close produced her fourth WNBA draft pick as a head coach, as Kennedy Burke was picked in the second round by the Dallas Wings as the 22nd overall pick. For Close’s complete bio, visit uclabruins.com.
COACH CLOSE CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
• Led UCLA to five-straight NCAA Tournaments, and eight of the last nine tournaments
• Helped UCLA reach its first NCAA Final Four in 2025
• One of three coaches in program history to achieve the 200-win milestone
• Coached in 24 NCAA Tournaments
• Advanced to at least the 2nd round in her last 19 NCAA Tournaments
• Teams have advanced to 10 Sweet 16’s and three Elite 8’s
• Teams have won or shared a total of 12 conference titles
• Helped Florida State win a school record 29 games in 2010
• Helped coach 17 players drafted by WNBA teams
• Won UCLA’s first-ever postseason WNIT Championship in 2015
TONY NEWNAN
Associate Head Coach
15th Season
Tony Newnan joined the UCLA women’s basketball staff in May of 2011 and enters his 15th season as at UCLA. He was named associate head coach ahead of the 2025-26 season and also serves as the program’s international recruiting coordinator.
Newnan has served on Head Coach Cori Close’s staff for the duration of her tenure; Newnans’s 14 seasons on the staff have seen the Bruins compile an impressive 321 wins. Newnan has also helped guide the squad to nine NCAA Tournament appearances, including the team’s most recent appearance in 2025 – the Bruins made their first appearance in the NCAA Final Four after an impressive campaign in 2024-25, capturing the Big Ten Championship by defeating USC in the title game. The team advanced to the Sweet 16 in fourstraight seasons from 2016-19 and secured Elite 8 berths in 2018 and 2025. The Bruins have seven Sweet 16 appearances under Newnan’s guidance.
Newnan was named 2024-25 NCAA Division I Assistant Coach of the Year by the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA).
The architect behind UCLA’s renovated offensive scheme, Newnan helped the Bruins produce the No. 2 scoring offense in the Pac-12 in 2020-21, as the team averaged 71.4 points per game and established a +13.1 scoring margin. Michaela Onyenwere (19.1 ppg) and Charisma Osborne (17.0 ppg) each averaged career-highs in scoring and earned All-Pac-12 accolades. Natalie Chou put up a career-high 9.9 points per game and secured All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention acclaim.
Newnan’s international recruiting expertise was pivotal in the development of the 2020 freshman class, as UCLA brought in Izzy Anstey from Australia and Emily Bessoir from Germany. Newnan also helped bring in Lina Sontag from Germany in the 2022 freshman class.
Newnan helped bring in UCLA’s first-ever No. 1-ranked recruiting class in 2014-15. The class included Recee’ Caldwell, Jordin Canada, Monique Billings, Lajahna Drummer and Kelli Hayes. In 2015-16, the Bruins’ recruiting class of Ashley Hearn and Kennedy Burke ranked ninth nationally.
Prior to UCLA, Newnan has been a women’s basketball assistant coach for eight seasons at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, Calif. The Warriors earned NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) national rankings and advanced to the NAIA Tournament in four of his last five seasons there. In 2009, Westmont posted a school record 22 wins and won at least 20 games in three of his last four seasons.
From 2000-01, Newnan worked as an assistant women’s basketball coach at Oregon State University. The Beavers entered post-season play (National Women’s Invitation Tournament) for the first time in six seasons during that year and were led by the play of guard Felicia Ragland who was named the Pac-10 Conference Player of the Year in 2001. Ragland, who went on to be selected by the Seattle Storm in the 2002 WNBA draft, also earned District VIII Kodak All-America honors in both 2001 and 2002. Newnan, who was the associate head coach at UC Santa Barbara in 1999-2000, served as a Gauchos’ assistant from 1993-2000. The Gauchos captured six Big West conference titles during his tenure, set a school record with 30 wins in 2000 and advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 1992, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2000. A 1992 graduate of UCSB, Newnan embarked on his coaching career as a student assistant coach for the Gaucho women’s team in 1990-93. He was then hired full-time the following season. During his years at UCSB, Newnan helped coach such future WNBA draft selections as Kayte Christensen, Erin Buescher and Stacy Clinesmith.
TASHA BROWN
Assistant Coach
Eighth Season
Tasha Brown heads into her eighth season in 2025-26 as an assistant coach for the UCLA women’s basketball team. Brown reported to her post on May 29, 2018 and replaced Jenny Huth, who was named head coach at Northern Colorado on May 1. Brown’s presence on the staff has helped the Bruins compile 171 wins over the last seven seasons, including six NCAA Tournament appearances and a Final Four berth. The Bruins have reached the Sweet 16 in three-consecutive campaigns.
Brown spent the 2017-18 season as an assistant coach at Rice University after spending the previous five seasons in the same capacity at the University of Cincinnati.
With more than two decades of coaching experience, Brown has made nine postseason appearances and helped develop 16 all-conference award winners and 12 professional players. Prior to Cincinnati, Brown spent four seasons as the head coach at Western Michigan University, where she produced an All-Mid-American Conference selection and a MAC All-Academic honoree each year.
“Tasha is an elite coach,” said Close. “She is a superb teacher who knows how to genuinely invest in our players as people and is an excellent recruiter. She will help us in our continual quest to be an uncommon transformational staff.”
Brown also served as an assistant coach at Wisconsin (2005-08), where she helped develop perimeter players and assisted with recruiting. During the 2006-07 season, Brown and the Badgers set a program record with 23 wins and Wisconsin made its first postseason appearance since 2002.
Prior to her appointment at Wisconsin, Brown was an assistant coach at UC-Santa Barbara (who advanced to the Sweet 16) from 2001-05, where she served as the recruiting coordinator, defensive coach, and helped coordinate the offense in her final campaign. She also was the team’s community outreach coordinator and was in charge of guard development.
Brown also had coaching stints at Bradley University, the University of Dayton and she began her coaching career at St. Ambrose in 1997.
A native of Rock Island, Ill., Brown is a graduate of St. Ambrose (1997) in Davenport, Iowa, with a degree in mathematics. She played four years of collegiate basketball, the first two of which were spent at Illinois Central College. After graduating from ICC, Brown attended Southwest Missouri State before transferring to St. Ambrose. In her lone season with the Queen Bees, the team went 27-7 and advanced to the NAIA National Tournament.
Brown is married to Darryl Brown.
SOH MATSUURA
Assistant Coach Third Season
COACHING STAFF
JAMES CLARK
Assistant Coach
Second Season
UCLA Women’s Basketball announced it promoted its former video coordinator, Soh Matsuura, to Assistant Coach on Oct. 4, 2023. Matsuura has been with the Bruins since the 2018-19 season.
“Soh is such a bright mind, he has a great attention to detail, he’s very thorough, and he’s an elite scouter,” said the Michael Price Family UCLA Women’s Head Basketball Coach Cori Close. “I think our program is lucky that we’re going to be able to expand his role.”
Matsuura came on as UCLA women’s basketball’s video coordinator in August 2021 and served in that role over the last two seasons. Outside of his scouting duties, he was helping with on-court instruction and off-court recruiting. As an undergraduate student, he was the head manager of the UCLA women’s basketball team from August 2018 until June 2020. Matsuura also acted as the head coach of UCLA women’s club basketball team during the 2019-2020 school year.
“I would like to thank Coach Cori Close, Pam Walker, and the rest of the staff for this amazing opportunity, and thank my family for their continued support of me,” said Matsuura. “I am extremely blessed, grateful and excited to take on a new role at this phenomenal program and institution. I am looking forward to give it my all to push forward the mission of this program and reach new heights with this team.”
In addition to his work with UCLA women’s hoops, Matsuura has also served as the video coordinator for USA Basketball. He earned gold medals with Team USA at the 2021 FIBA U19 Women’s World Cup, the 2022 FIBA U18 Women’s Americas Championship and the 2023 FIBA U19 Women’s Basketball World Cup. He was responsible for all video and film needs for coaches, players, and selection committee requests; Matsuura assisted and provided scouting film prior to games, and he cut up game film after each matchup concluded.
“He has been so diligent to elevate every year and use what he’s done to contribute at higher levels,” said Close. “It made it a no-brainer that he had earned the opportunity to become an assistant coach in our program.”
A graduate of UCLA in the class of 2020, Matsuura finished his studies at the number one public university with a bachelor’s of science in physiological science. While at UCLA, Matsuura also worked for UCLA Recreation inside Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom as an operations and special event supervisor.
Prior to his arrival in Westwood, Matsuura spent his senior year of high school interning with the New York Giants in the equipment room. He graduated from Bergen Tech High School in New Jersey.
The Michael Price Family UCLA Women’s Head Basketball Coach Cori announced the addition of James Clark to the coaching staff prior to the 2024-25 campaign.
“I’ve been so impressed with James Clark throughout the years,” said Close, “especially with his elite skill development. When this position opened up, he was an immediate thought for me. I think a strength of ours is already skill development, but Coach Clark just adds to that. Anytime you can help invest in your players and help them get better, it’s a win-win.”
Clark most recently helped lead the Stockton Kings to the best record in the NBA G League during the 2022-23 campaign, earning the No. 1 seed in the 2023 playoffs. His primary responsibility was to work with and develop wing players, and he was also creating player personnel scouting reports for matchups throughout the season. Clark was responsible for team offensive and defensive sets with the Sacramento Kings’ affiliate team. He also assisted the Sacramento NBA team during the first round of the 2023 NBA playoffs.
“UCLA is getting a talented coach that’s dedicated to perfecting his coaching skills,” said Philadelphia 76ers assistant coach Bobby Jackson. “Coach Clark has an innate ability to get the best out of his players, especially on the skill development side. His love for the game has allowed him to become one of the best skill development coaches in the country.”
The player development coach has worked with the Guam National Team (2021) and the Chinese Men’s National Team (2019), helping them prepare for summer international competition. Clark has made NCAA women’s basketball coaching stops at Drexel University, Wagner College and Georgetown University. He has directed year-round player development programs for athletes at all levels – NBA, WNBA, collegiate, high school and youth – and led summer training camps for nearly a decade.
“I’ve known James Clark since we were 18 years old, a longtime friend and business partner,” said three-time NBA champion and former Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Phil Handy. “He’s a passionate and intelligent coach who brings a ton of knowledge. His ability to help players get better is proven at the highest level. Great coach and even better human!”
Clark completed his bachelor’s degree in general studies at La Salle University in 2004. While pursuing his degree, he coached with the Philadelphia Belles Girls’ Basketball Club from 2004-07. Clark helped guide the Dragons to four-consecutive postseason tournament appearances over four seasons, a Drexel school record. During his five years in Philadelphia, the Dragons posted a 97-59 record (.621), highlighted by a 24-9 record in 2008-09, a season that was capped by winning the CAA regular season and the CAA postseason tournament, which resulted in a berth in the NCAA Tournament.
“JC is also a relationship builder, he’s a connector,” said Close. “The combination of his heart to invest and impact young people, as well as his ability to develop skills, and help our players get better makes me feel like we got better as a staff with him joining us.”
Clark’s first foray into coaching was serving as head coach of the women’s varsity team at his alma mater, Capuchino High School in San Bruno, Calif. He is also a renowned shooting coach working with NBA and WNBA players; Clark recently prepared Brandon Miller for the 2023 NBA Draft; Miller was selected second overall by the Charlotte Hornets. He also helped train Ben Simmons and Dejounte Murray ahead of the 2016 NBA Draft. Clark also organized and conducted an NBA Pro Day at UCLA in the summer of 2018 that was attended by all 30 NBA teams. Early in his career, Clark worked with the Orlando Miracle of the WNBA.
“James Clark’s ability to unlock the full potential of his players makes him a tremendous addition to the UCLA Women’s Basketball coaching staff,” said Minnesota Timberwolves assistant coach Chris Hines. “His dedication to fostering talent and instilling confidence will elevate any program to new heights.”
The California native played collegiate ball at Santa Rosa Junior College, West Georgia College and Bethany College. Clark also played one year of professional basketball in Australia in 2000 before entering the coaching ranks.
MICHAELA ONYENWERE
Assistant Coach First Season
PAM WALKER
Director of Operations
37th Season
UCLA Women’s Basketball added Bruin alum and 2021 WNBA Rookie of the Year Michaela Onyenwere to its staff as an assistant coach for the 2025-26 season, the program announced on Sept. 16.
“What an honor it is to welcome Mic back to campus,” said The Michael Price Family UCLA Women’s Head Basketball Coach Cori Close. “I’m excited to bring her on and use her incredible basketball mind. Our student-athletes have an amazing opportunity to learn a lot from a vet in the W – many of our players aspire to keep playing after they graduate here, so they can take full advantage of picking the mind of a seasoned pro. We’re so lucky to have Michaela join our staff!”
The Aurora, Colo., native, who played for the Chicago Sky during her fifth year the WNBA this summer, provides valuable experience as a professional in the basketball world.
“I’m extremely honored to be back in Westwood as an assistant coach with the Bruins!” said Onyenwere. “To represent this program and university again fills my heart with joy – I’m so excited to be able to work with our student-athletes from this side of the bench. I truly believe we are building something special here, and I’m fully prepared to help mentor and equip our players so we can accomplish all of our goals this year. Go Bruins!”
The Bruin was drafted sixth overall by the New York Liberty in the 2021 WNBA Draft; she led all rookies in points per game (8.6 PPG), points (275), field goals made (91 FGM), 3-point field goals (37 3FGM) and total minutes played (721) on her way to an All-Rookie selection during her first campaign in the W. Onyenwere was unanimously voted 2021 Associated Press (AP) Rookie of the Year.
Onyenwere left UCLA as the program’s fourth-leading scorer, totaling 1,888-career points, and she ranked eighth all-time in rebounds (885 REB) for the Bruins. The forward was named AP Third Team All-American her junior and senior year, marking the first two-time AP All-American in program history. Onyenwere was a three-time All-Pac-12 selection and made the Pac-12 All-Freshman Team in 2018.
UCLA boasted a 92-32 record over her four years with the Bruins.
“I’m extremely excited for Michaela to be joining the coaching staff at UCLA,” said Atlanta Dream guard Jordin Canada, who was teammates with Onyenwere with the Bruins in 2017-18. “She brings the knowledge, the experience and the energy that will be a great addition to the program!”
While a student at UCLA, Onyenwere and five of her teammates started the “More Than a D.R.E.A.M.” initiative to help use their platform to educate others on racial injustice, issues that Black people in America face, and Black culture. The acronym, which stands for Diversify, Reveal, Educate, Advocate and Motivate, captures the initiative’s goal of promoting awareness on these racial issues and empowering diverse identities and cultures. Onyenwere and the “More Than a D.R.E.A.M.” committee also hosted conversations about race with prominent figures and notable alumni called “Bruin Table Talk” – Baron Davis, Earl Watson, Canada and Dawn Staley made appearances on the YouTube show.
Pam Walker, a UCLA graduate, is in her 37th season as a member of the Bruin women’s basketball staff. This is her 15th season working as the Director of Basketball Operations. Prior to her current stint, she spent the previous 21 seasons at UCLA serving as an assistant coach.
Walker is responsible for scheduling, equipment, team travel, facilities, community service projects, monitoring of the players’ academic progress, assisting with budgeting, camps and on-campus recruiting. She also oversees the managers and video intern and liaisons with marketing, development and sports information.
During the 2018-19 season, UCLA women’s basketball celebrated Walker in a surprise ceremony during the Bruins’ Dec. 28 game vs. Cal Poly. Multiple alumni made the trip to Westwood to join the celebration of Walker’s 30th season with the program.
During her coaching tenure at UCLA, the Bruins competed in the NCAA Tournament seven times, including an Elite Eight appearance in 1999. UCLA also won a Pac-10 regular season title in 1999 and a Pac-10 Tournament title in 2006. Walker coached two Pac-10 Players of the Year, four Pac-10 Freshmen of the Year and seven All-Americans.
Walker joined the Bruin staff prior to the 1989-90 season after four years as head girls’ basketball coach at Hart High School (1986-89) in Newhall, Calif. In her final season at Hart, she guided the school to the quarterfinals of the state championship tournament, the CIF 5-A Southern Section championship and the Foothill League title. She was also named CIF Coach of the Year that season. Several of her high school standouts continued their playing careers at the college level.
Prior to coaching at Hart, Walker served as head girls’ basketball coach at St. Bernard’s High School in Playa del Rey, Calif. (1984-85), and at Van Nuys High School (1982), where she directed the Wolves into the Los Angeles City championship game. Walker, who graduated from UCLA in 1985 with a Bachlelor of Arts in political science, international relations, earned her master’s degree in education at UCLA in 1990. She has been married since 2004 to Larry Muir, who teaches history and is the head football coach at Valencia High School. Muir was a member of the UCLA football team from 1989-90. The couple lives in Valencia with their two dogs, Annie and Billie.
2024-25 GAME-BY-GAME LEADERS
Dec. 8 at Washington*
Dec. 14 at Long Beach St.
Dec. 16 Cal Poly
Dec. 20 vs. Creighton3
Dec. 29 Nebraska*
Jan. 1 No. 24 Michigan*
Jan. 4 at
Jan. 7 at Purdue*
Jan. 12 Northwestern#*
Jan. 15 Penn State^*
Jan. 20 vs. No.
Jan. 23 at
Jan. 26 at No.
Feb. 2 Minnesota*
Feb. 5 No. 8 Ohio
Feb. 9 at Oregon*
Feb.
Feb. 23 at
Feb. 26 at
March 1 No. 4 USC*
March 7 vs. No.
March
March 9 vs. No. 1-seed USC5 W,
March 21 No. 16-seed Southern6 W, 84-46
2024-25 FINAL STATISTICS AND RESULTS
April
* - Big Ten Conference Games; 1 - Aflac Oui-Play (Paris,
3 - Invisalign Bay Area Women’s Basketball Classic (San Francisco, Calif.)
# - Game cancelled due to wildfires in Los Angeles, considered “No Contest” in NCAA and a win in Big Ten standings
^ - Played at The Walter Pyramid (Long Beach, Calif.)
4 - Coretta Scott King Classic (Newark, N.J.)
5
2024-25 BIG TEN CONFERENCE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL FINAL STANDINGS
2024-25 ALL-BIG TEN CONFERENCE
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
JuJu Watkins, USC (Coaches & Media)
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Lauren Betts, UCLA (Coaches & Media)
FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR
Jaloni Cambridge, Ohio State (Coaches & Media) / Olivia Olson, Michigan (Coaches: Co-Freshman of the Year)
2024-25 BIG TEN WOMEN’S BASKETBALL SPORTSMANSHIP HONOREES Kendall Bostic, Illinois; Chloe Moore-McNeil, Indiana; Sydney Affolter, Iowa; Sarah Te-Biasu, Maryland; Jordan Hobbs, Michigan; Nyla Hampton, Michigan State; Maggie Czinano, Minnesota; Callin Hake, Nebraska; Lauren Trumpy, Northwestern; Madison Greene, Ohio State; Peyton Scott, Oregon; Alli Campbell, Penn State;; Ella Collier, Purdue; Awa Sidibe, Rutgers; Kiki Rice, UCLA; Malia Samuels, USC; Dalayah Daniels, Washington; Natalie Leuzinger, Wisconsin
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
AIR FORCE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
03/20/22 H W 61-45
ALABAMA
All-Time Alabama 1-0
Streak Alabama +1
At Alabama Alabama 1-0
NCAA Tournament Alabama 1-0
3/15/98 A L 74-75
AMERICAN
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/17/18 H W 71-60
ARIZONA
All-Time UCLA 64-25
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 31-10
At UCLA (Pauley) UCLA 26-9
At UCLA (Wooden) UCLA 5-0
At Arizona UCLA 29-14
Neutral UCLA 4-1
Pac-10/12 Games UCLA 46-22
Pac-10/12 Tournament UCLA 4-1
3/2/23 N W 73-59
2/3/23 H L 66-71
2/24/22 A W 64-46
1/26/22 H L 63-74
3/5/21 N W 58-49
12/4/20 H L 65-68
1/31/20 A L 66-92
1/5/20 H W 70-58
1/27/19 A W 98-93 (3ot)
2/9/18 H W 69-46
2/24/17 A W 79-56
1/29/17 H W 69-49
3/4/16 N W 72-51
2/26/16 H W 80-53
2/7/16 A W 73-39
3/5/15 N W 80-62
2/22/15 H W 75-41
1/10/14 A W 67-61
3/3/13 A W 68-57
1/25/13 H W 73-57
3/7/12 N L 57-61
2/25/12 H* W 72-58
1/5/12 A L 66-74
2/24/11 A W 74-70
1/29/11 H W 70-60
3/6/10 H W 70-61
1/1/10 A W 67-58
2/12/09 H W 58-39
1/17/09 A W 48-38
3/1/08 H W 80-70
12/30/07 A W 68-59
2/15/07 H L 63-66
1/20/07 A W 76-73
2/4/06 A W 90-64
1/6/06 H W 84-77
2/10/05 A L 73-76
1/16/05 H L 73-84
2/12/04 H W 87-68
1/17/04 A L 54-70
2/14/03 H W 48-47
1/18/03 A L 61-80
2/14/02 A L 62-77
1/19/02 H L 60-71
2/15/01 A L 79-89
1/20/01 H W 59-56 (ot)
2/19/00 H W 80-66
1/20/00 A W 79-68
3/6/99 H W 85-77
1/2/99 A W 84-77
3/7/98 A L 73-84
1/2/98 H L 71-82
2/14/97 H L 78-90
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
1/18/97 A L 45-69
2/15/96 A L 66-95
1/20/96 H W 89-85 (ot)
2/16/95 A L 61-63
1/21/95 H L 61-64
2/18/94 H* W 85-69
1/22/94 A L 78-83
3/11/93 H L 83-91
1/9/93 A W 91-77
3/6/92 H W 83-67
2/8/92 A W 97-63
2/7/91 A W 112-98
1/13/91 H* W 115-102
2/9/90 H W 73-69
1/13/90 A W 82-70
2/19/89 A W 75-64
1/21/89 H* W 93-69
2/20/88 A W 81-63
1/22/88 H* W 87-62
2/12/87 H W 65-59
1/10/87 A W 66-65
2/13/86 A L 58-76
1/18/86 H L 65-70
2/21/85 H W 79-48
1/26/85 A W 82-68
2/24/84 H W 82-76
1/14/84 A W 81-60
2/12/83 H W 79-55
1/14/83 A W 66-65
2/12/82 A W 85-68
1/16/82 H W 78-68
2/13/81 H W 89-80
1/17/81 A W 90-53
2/16/80 A W 100-78
1/18/80 H W 122-43
2/16/79 A W 98-46
1/8/77 A W 98-56
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
ARIZONA STATE
All-Time UCLA 65-28
Streak UCLA +16
At UCLA UCLA 33-10
At UCLA (Pauley)
UCLA 25-9
At UCLA (Wooden) UCLA 7-1
At Arizona State UCLA 27-16
Neutral UCLA 5-2
Pac-10/12 Games UCLA 46-22
Pac-10/12 Tournament UCLA 5-2
2/29/24 A W 70-41
2/11/24 H W 78-45
3/1/23 N W 81-70 (ot)
2/5/23 H W 82-63
2/26/22 A W 59-52
1/29/21 H W 60-57
12/6/20 A W 63-59
2/2/20 A W 70-61
1/3/20 H W 68-66
3/8/19 N W 73-69
2/25/19 A W 61-59
2/11/18 H W 71-63
3/3/17 N W 77-68
2/26/17 A W 55-52
1/27/17 H W 69-60
2/28/16 H W 74-61
2/5/16 A L 61-65
2/20/15 H L 56-68
1/12/14 A L 57-59
3/1/13 A W 58-50
1/27/13 H W 54-50
2/23/12 H* W 53-38
1/7/12 A W 64-48
2/26/11 A W 61-45
1/27/11 H W 70-60
3/4/10 H W 63-59
1/3/10 A W 74-56
2/14/09 H L 66-69
1/15/09 A L 44-68
2/28/08 H L 67-73
1/18/07 A L 52-92
3/5/06 N W 60-59
2/2/06 A L 70-87
1/8/06 H W 77-69
3/5/05 N L 71-73
2/12/05 A L 59-80
1/14/05 H L 42-44
3/6/04 N W 70-50
2/14/04 H W 73-64
1/15/04 A L 58-73
2/16/03 H W 71-62
1/16/03 A W 60-58
2/16/02 A L 42-64
1/17/02 H L 57-70
2/17/01 A L 60-78
1/18/01 H L 68-78
2/17/00 H W 56-47
1/22/00 A W 76-55
3/4/99 H W 64-61
1/5/99 A W 98-85
3/5/98 A W 80-62
1/4/98 H W 95-73
2/16/97 H W 91-61
1/10/97 A L 65-66
2/17/96 A L 70-71
1/18/96 H W 84-74
2/18/95 A W 68-63
1/19/95 H W 85-64
2/20/94 H* W 93-81
1/20/94 A W 84-59
3/13/93 H W 72-71
1/7/93 A W 81-63
3/8/92 H* L 91-99
2/6/92 A W 88-72
2/9/91 A L 65-70
1/11/91 H* W 81-68
2/11/90 H* W 90-75
1/11/90 A W 77-67
2/18/89 A L 73-86
1/20/89 H* W 85-81
2/19/88 A W 83-62
1/23/88 H* W 71-64
2/14/87 H* W 88-77
1/8/87 A W 85-78
2/15/86 A W 76-68
1/17/86 H L 62-78
2/23/85 H W 77-70
1/15/85 A W 97-61
2/25/84 H W 81-64
1/13/84 A L 78-79
2/11/83 H L 61-73
1/15/83 A W 66-42
2/13/82 A L 62-74
1/15/82 H W 79-70
2/14/81 H W 76-68
1/16/81 A W 84-55
2/14/80 A W 86-72
1/19/80 H W 93-66
1/7/77 A W 85-47
12/17/77 H W 106-69
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
ARKANSAS
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +2 At UCLA UCLA 1-0 At Arkansas Tied 1-1
NCAA Tournament Arkansas 1-0
11/17/24 H W 101-52
12/3/23 A W 81-66
3/14/90 A L 80-90 (ot)
AUBURN
All-Time Auburn 2-0
Streak Auburn +2 At UCLA Auburn 1-0
Neutral Auburn 1-0
12/21/13 N L 60-66
12/15/87 H* L 52-76
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
BAYLOR
All-Time Baylor 7-4
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 3-2
At Baylor Baylor 5-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
1/20/25 N W 84-66
11/18/17 H W 82-68
11/14/16 A L 70-84
11/17/12 A L 50-83
12/17/06 H L 70-83
11/18/05 A L 85-93
12/19/02 H L 77-89
12/16/01 A L 59-92
12/7/96 H W 58-55
12/18/95 A L 68-74
12/4/76 H W 83-79
BELLARMINE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Home UCLA 1-0
11/12/23 H W 113-64
BELMONT
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
3/19/76 N W 80-71
BOISE STATE
All-Time Boise St. 2-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA Tied 1-1
At Boise State Boise St. 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/18/17 H W 83-56
12/3/94 A L 45-61
12/19/93 H L 64-66
BOWLING GREEN
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/19/06 N W 74-61
BYU
All-Time UCLA 8-4
Streak BYU +2
At UCLA UCLA 4-2
At BYU Tied 2-2
Neutral UCLA 2-0
12/15/07 A L 58-68
11/22/05 H L 67-71
11/27/01 H W 73-62
11/25/00 A L 53-68
12/17/87 A W 77-69
2/19/86 H L 68-81
11/24/82 A W 96-86
11/27/81 H W 83-73
12/26/79 H W 92-80
12/2/78 N W 87-79
3/17/78 N W 102-57
12/22/77 H W 116-62
CALIFORNIA
All-Time UCLA 60-23
Streak UCLA +11
At UCLA UCLA 31-8
At UCLA (Pauley) UCLA 25-8
At UCLA (Wooden) UCLA 5-0
At California UCLA 22-15
Neutral UCLA 8-0
Pac-10/12 Games UCLA 48-22
Pac-10/12 Tournament UCLA 6-0
2/2/24 A W 78-58
2/17/23 A W 67-54
2/9/20 A
A W 82-46 2/3/17 A L 77-80 3/5/16 N W 73-67 (ot) 1/22/16 H W 75-56 12/21/15 A L 104-108 (2ot) 2/12/15 A L 64-70 1/25/15 H
A W 87-62
2/14/98 A W 86-54 1/16/98 H W 74-53 2/6/97 A W 82-56 1/10/97 H* W 74-65 2/9/96 H* W 71-66 1/13/96 A W 75-64
2/23/95 H W 87-67 1/28/95 A L 84-97 2/24/94 A W 90-85 1/30/94 H W 79-56 2/21/93 H* W 85-68 1/23/93 A L 70-78
2/16/92 H W 101-87
1/16/92 A L 71-74
2/15/91 H W 96-78
1/19/91 A W 102-83
2/15/90 A W 80-66
1/20/90 H W 70-68
3/11/89 A L 81-92
1/6/89 H* W 72-57 3/11/88 A W 81-63
3/5/88 H L 68-71
2/5/87 H W 92-80
1/4/87 A W 77-72
12/28/07 A L 59-62
3/3/07 N L 64-74
2/18/07 H L 69-80
1/15/23 H W 87-70
2/6/22 H W 59-54
12/19/20 H W 71-37
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
CAL BAPTIST
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
3/23/24 H W 84-55
CAL POLY
All-Time UCLA 11-0
Streak UCLA +11
At UCLA UCLA 8-0
At Cal Poly UCLA 3-0
12/16/24 H W 69-37
11/7/22 H W 84-48
12/28/18 H W 81-35
11/20/16 H W 80-64
12/28/13 H W 96-89
11/26/08 A W 57-48
11/20/07 H W 107-83
2/27/76 H W 86-41
1/30/76 A W 97-35
2/22/75 H W 81-32
2/8/75 A W 96-43
CSU BAKERSFIELD
All-Time UCLA 4-0
Streak UCLA +4
At UCLA UCLA 4-0
WNIT UCLA 1-0
12/17/22 H W 75-47
12/5/15 H W 82-68
3/19/15 H W 70-54
12/3/08 H W 104-57
CAL STATE FULLERTON
All-Time UCLA 27-10
Streak UCLA +7
At UCLA UCLA 15-3
At Cal State Fullerton UCLA 11-6
Neutral Tied 1-1
12/10/22 H W 64-41
11/27/20 H W 98-49
11/16/08 H W 78-62
11/30/06 A W 84-74
12/17/99 A W 108-75
12/5/98 H* W 94-64
12/2/92 H W 99-66
11/28/90 A L 63-78
12/8/89 H* W 84-75
12/10/88 A L 51-68
12/5/86 H* W 79-55
3/1/86 A W 62-57
11/30/85 N W 67-52
2/16/85 A W 78-69
1/16/85 H L 55-65
2/10/84 A W 63-56
3/7/84 H L 59-66
2/18/83 A W 80-70
1/22/83 H W 82-62
2/26/82 H W 73-61
1/26/82 A W 88-66
2/20/81 A L 86-88
1/20/81 H W 99-75
2/12/80 H W 94-58
1/25/80 A W 89-64
2/15/79 A W 72-69
1/23/79 H W 100-87
2/16/78 A W 100-73
1/25/78 H W 101-55
3/12/77 A L 87-91
2/17/77 H W 74-48
1/28/77 A L 61-68
3/4/76 A L 69-74
12/20/75 H W 73-68
3/1/75 N L 62-63
2/20/75 A W 51-43
2/5/75 H L 55-60
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE
All-Time UCLA 12-1
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA UCLA 6-1
At Cal State Northridge UCLA 6-0
11/18/21 H W 73-46
12/7/19 A W 58-44
12/20/12 H L 72-77
11/30/08 H W 96-53
11/14/07 A W 81-69
12/17/03 A W 74-66
12/21/02 H W 88-49
12/29/91 H W 107-47
3/1/76 A W 98-55
1/24/76 A W 81-56
2/12/75 H W 87-32
2/3/75 A W 77-27
CENTRAL FLORIDA
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/19/94 N W 61-56
CHARLOTTE
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA Charlotte 1-0
At Charlotte UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/26/05 N W 87-71
1/1/95 H L 50-60
12/30/93 A W 72-57
CINCINNATI
All-Time Tied 1-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At Cincinnati Cincinnati 1-0
12/2/14 H W 66-58
11/26/88 A L 57-59
CLEMSON
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At Clemson UCLA 1-0
Neutral Clemson 1-0
12/3/05 A W 76-63
11/24/04 H W 83-52
12/21/94 N L 62-79
COLGATE
All-Time
UCLA 2-0
Streak UCLA +2
Neutral UCLA 2-0
11/10/24 H W 81-63
11/26/11 N W 68-48
COLORADO
All-Time
UCLA 16-7
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 8-2
At Colorado UCLA 8-5
Neutral Colorado 1-0
Pac-12 Games UCLA 12-5
Pac-12 Tournament Colorado 1-0
2/26/24 H W 53-45
1/19/24 A W 76-68
1/27/23 A L 70-73 (ot)
2/18/22 H L 54-67
1/9/22 A L 63-71
2/28/20 H W 62-52
1/12/20 A W 65-62
3/3/19 H W 84-50
2/8/19 A W 64-60
2/6/15 H W 72-65
1/11/15 A W 90-84
3/6/14 N L 65-76
2/28/14 A L 42-62
1/5/14 H L 59-61
2/1/13 H W 62-46
1/29/12 A W 62-54 (ot)
12/8/01 H L 48-79
12/2/00 A L 63-88
12/22/84 A W 77-70
12/22/83 H W 91-66
COLORADO STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/20/99 N W 77-68
CONNECTICUT
All-Time UConn 8-1
Streak UConn +1 At UCLA UConn 2-0
At Connecticut UConn 1-0
Neutral UConn 5-1
NCAA Tournament UConn 3-0
4/4/25 N L 51-85
11/24/23 N W 78-67
12/11/21 N L 61-71
3/29/19 N L 61-69
11/21/17 H L 60-48
3/25/17 N L 71-86
12/21/14 N L 50-86
12/23/99 A L 64-106
11/17/98 H L 102-113
CREIGHTON
All-Time UCLA 4-0
Streak UCLA +4 At UCLA UCLA 2-0
Neutral UCLA 2-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 2-0
12/20/25 N W 70-41
3/25/24 H W 67-63
3/19/18 H W 86-64
11/25/17 N W 72-63
DELAWARE STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0 Streak UCLA +1 Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/8/06 N W 64-54
DEPAUL
All-Time UCLA 2-0
Streak UCLA +2 At UCLA UCLA 1-0 At DePaul UCLA 1-0
12/2/83 A W 86-62
12/18/82 H W 74-48
DUKE
All-Time Duke 2-1
Streak Duke +2 At UCLA Duke 1-0 At Duke UCLA 1-0
Neutral Duke 1-0
11/10/00 N L 52-80
12/28/98 H L 80-85
12/20/97 A W 93-83
EAST CAROLINA
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/20/10 N W 81-67
EASTERN ILLINOIS
All-Time UCLA 1-0
EASTERN WASHINGTON
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
12/13/80 H W 93-69
FLORIDA STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/10/23 N W 95-78
FORDHAM
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At Fordham UCLA 1-0
12/20/17 A W 67-30
FRESNO STATE
All-Time UCLA 12-0
Streak UCLA +12
At UCLA UCLA 7-0
At Fresno State UCLA 4-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/30/24 N W 97-41
12/20/22 H W 82-48
12/7/18 H W 80-69
12/11/04 A W 92-76
12/21/03 H W 69-56
12/14/98 A W 74-71
12/2/95 H W 75-70
12/16/83 H W 79-63
1/14/76 H W 89-44
2/13/76 A W 96-47
2/7/75 A W 89-51
1/25/75 H W 82-44
GARDNER-WEBB
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/21/04 N W 89-48
GEORGE WASHINGTON
All-Time GW 3-0
Streak GW +3
At UCLA GW 1-0
At GW GW 1-0
Neutral GW 1-0
NCAA Tournament GW 1-0
3/17/00 N L 72-79
11/28/97 H L 73-78
12/19/96 A L 53-76
GEORGIA
All-Time UCLA 4-3
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA Georgia 2-1
At Georgia Tied 1-1
Neutral UCLA 2-0
NCAA Tournament Georgia 1-0
12/19/20 A W 59-50
11/14/18 H W 80-69
11/25/05 N W 84-64
12/6/02 A L 83-91
12/30/00 H L 55-89
3/21/85 H L 42-78
11/27/82 N W 75-57
GEORGIA TECH
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/19/94 N W 81-69
GONZAGA
All-Time Gonzaga 2-0
Streak Gonzaga +2
N W
GREEN BAY
HAWAI’I
IDAHO STATE
ILLINOIS
ILLINOIS-CHICAGO
ILLINOIS STATE
INDIANA
2/22/18 H W 73-67
1/14/18 A W 93-55
1/1/17 H W 87-74
1/29/16 A W 82-64
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
11/24/89 H W 73-70
At Gonzaga Gonzaga 1-0
Neutral Gonzaga 1-0
NCAA Tournament Gonzaga 1-0
3/21/11 A L 75-89
11/24/06 N L 57-62
IOWA
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +2
At Iowa Tied 1-1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
2/23/25 A W 67-65
11/24/16 N W 78-65
11/24/90 A L 52-81
JACKSON STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
11/25/22 H W 72-60
JAMES MADISON
All-Time JMU 4-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA Tied 1-1
At JMU JMU 2-0
Neutral JMU 1-0
11/20/15 H W 90-61
11/14/14 A L 87-91 (ot)
11/29/13 N L 67-77
12/16/91 A L 72-78
12/30/90 H L 69-75
KANSAS
All-Time Tied 2-2
Streak Kansas +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At Kansas Tied 1-1
Neutral Kansas 1-0
12/3/09 A L 49-54
12/21/08 H W 67-64
11/25/90 N L 63-76
3/21/81 A W 73-71
KANSAS STATE
All-Time UCLA 4-0
Streak UCLA +4
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At Kansas State UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/24/17 N W 64-55
12/19/80 H W 83-70
2/2/79 A W 64-60
1/23/78 H W 123-62
KENT STATE
All-Time Kent St. 1-0
Streak Kent St. +1
Neutral Kent St. 1-0
11/26/21 N L 69-75
KENTUCKY
All-Time UCLA 4-2
Streak Kentucky +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At Kentucky Kentucky 1-0
Neutral UCLA 2-1
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
11/23/18 N L 74-75 (ot)
3/15/99 H W 87-63
11/29/98 N W 64-54
12/28/94 H W 74-65
12/21/81 A L 72-83
1/6/78 N W 97-72
LIBERTY
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/16/01 N W 62-55
LONG BEACH STATE
All-Time LBSU 18-17
Streak UCLA +5
At UCLA LBSU 8-7
At LBSU LBSU 8-7 Neutral UCLA 3-2
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
11/14/19 H W 86-51
2/5/02 A W 77-73
12/10/00 H W 86-60
12/6/95 H W 89-65
12/3/87 A L 57-103
12/15/86 H L 65-110
2/7/86 H L 69-85
1/21/86 A L 56-79
2/13/85 H L 70-96
1/22/85 A L 65-118
3/1/84 A L 61-64
1/25/84 H L 82-93
2/2/83 H L 60-82
1/20/83 A L 63-81
2/24/82 A L 61-63
1/28/82 H L 73-74
2/18/81 H L 65-85
1/22/81 A W 85-76
3/7/80 N L 88-89
2/20/80 A L 91-94
1/23/80 H L 79-82
3/10/79 N W 96-80
2/7/79 A W 76-74
1/19/79 H W 84-77
3/10/78 N W 79-78
2/8/78 H W 94-65
1/18/78 A W 107-94
3/11/77 N W 91-77
2/9/77 A W 86-73
1/22/77 H W 93-59
3/12/76 N L 77-78
2/18/76 A W 67-62
1/21/76 H W 75-62
1/22/75 A L 45-50
LSU
All-Time LSU 5-3
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-1
At LSU LSU 3-0
Neutral Tied 1-1
NCAA Tournament Tied 1-1
3/30/25 N W 72-65
3/30/24 N L 69-78
12/13/11 A L 41-58
12/28/10 H L 53-55
1/6/84 A L 87-101
1/12/82 H W 81-63
1/5/80 A L 72-73
1/16/79 H W 95-85
LOUISIANA TECH
All-Time La. Tech 11-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA La. Tech 4-0
At La. Tech La. Tech 5-0
Neutral La. Tech 2-1
NCAA Tournament La. Tech 1-0
11/27/15 N W 68-57
12/5/99 N L 64-82
3/22/99 N L 62-88
1/4/86 A L 59-73
1/29/85 H L 50-76
1/4/84 A L 58-94
1/26/83 H L 59-84
2/20/82 A L 63-103
3/24/81 A L 54-87
1/29/81 H L 61-99
1/4/80 A L 77-93
1/12/79 H L 81-85
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT
All-Time UCLA 10-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 6-0
At Loyola Marymount UCLA 4-1
11/9/19 H W 74-52
11/6/18 A L 63-69
12/2/12 H W 86-66
12/3/10 A W 67-43
12/28/09 H W 73-52
12/5/96 A W 60-39
1/2/93 H W 81-47
12/2/88 A W 61-46
1/20/87 H W 72-45
2/3/84 H W 106-59
MARQUETTE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/21/22 N W 66-58 (ot)
MARYLAND
All-Time Maryland 5-4
Streak UCLA +2 At UCLA Tied 2-2 At Maryland Maryland 2-1 Neutral Tied 1-1
1/26/25 A W 82-67
3/25/19 A W 85-80
11/23/08 A L 65-88
11/25/07 H L 75-79
12/30/95 H W 82-70
12/29/81 H L 74-81
12/30/78 N L 56-71
3/25/78 H W 90-74
1/4/78 A L 88-92
MEMPHIS
All-Time UCLA 1-0 Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
1/9/81 H W 82-71
MERCER
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
3/14/75 N W 62-50
MIAMI
All-Time Miami 1-0
Streak Miami +1
Neutral Miami 1-0
12/18/14 N L 67-74
MICHIGAN
All-Time UCLA 5-0
Streak UCLA +5 at UCLA UCLA 2-0 at Michigan UCLA 2-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
WNIT UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
1/1/25 H W 86-70
12/11/16 H W 84-64
12/13/15 A W 86-77
4/1/15 A W 69-65
3/13/98 N W 65-58
MICHIGAN STATE
All-Time Tied 2-2
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA Tied 1-1 At Michigan State MSU 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
2/16/25 H W 75-69
12/19/03 H L 43-47
11/17/01 A L 63-67
12/29/92 N W 82-57
MINNESOTA
All-Time UCLA 3-1
Streak UCLA +2 At Minnesota Tied 1-1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament Minnesota 1-0
2/2/25 H W 79-53
12/20/13 A W 58-55
3/21/04 A L 81-92
12/19/79 N W 78-63
MISSISSIPPI STATE
All-Time MSU 1-0
Streak MSU +1
Neutral MSU 1-0
NCAA Tournament MSU 1-0
3/25/18 N L 73-89
MISSOURI
All-Time Missouri 2-0
Streak Missouri +2
At UCLA Missouri 1-0
At Missouri Missouri 1-0
1/5/83 H L 61-62
12/17/81 A L 57-59
MISSOURI STATE
All-Time MSU 1-0
Streak MSU +1
Neutral MSU 1-0
NCAA Tournament MSU 1-0
3/26/92 N L 57-83
MONMOUTH
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At Monmouth UCLA 1-0
12/22/87 A W 81-62
MONTANA
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/19/11 N W 55-47
MONTANA STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
12/5/10 H W 54-44
NEBRASKA
All-Time UCLA 6-3
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 3-1
At Nebraska Tied 1-1
Neutral UCLA 2-1
NCAA Tournament Nebraska 1-0
3/7/25 N W 85-74
12/29/24 H W 91-54
11/28/14 H L 66-71
11/8/13 A L 49-77
3/23/10 N L 70-83
11/27/98 N W 85-67
1/10/84 H W 84-54
2/3/79 A W 72-63
1/11/77 H W 68-53
NEVADA
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
12/7/08 H W 62-47
NEW MEXICO
All-Time UNM 2-0
Streak UNM +2
At New Mexico UNM 2-0
12/9/06 A L 63-72
11/11/00 A L 54-75
NEW ORLEANS
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UNO 1-0
At New Orleans UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/29/96 N W 90-59
1/2/86 A W 79-59
12/7/84 H L 73-75
12/14/24 A W 102-51 NORTH
12/4/11 A W 84-48
NORTH CAROLINA A&T
NORTH CAROLINA STATE
NORTHWESTERN
NOTRE DAME
All-Time UCLA 9-8
Streak ND +4
At UCLA UCLA 5-3
At Notre Dame ND 4-3
Neutral Tied 1-1
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
11/28/15 N L 84-92 (ot)
12/28/14 H L 67-82
12/7/13 A L 48-90
11/23/12 H L 64-76
11/18/10 A W 86-83 (2ot)
11/14/98 A L 82-99
11/30/97 H L 91-93 (2ot)
3/18/92 H W 93-72
11/30/90 H W 89-75
12/22/89 A L 60-61
1/5/87 H W 67-65 (ot)
12/21/85 A W 73-67
12/30/84 H W 78-51
12/3/83 A L 61-70
1/30/83 H W 84-53
11/26/82 N W 82-54
12/5/81 A W 50-45
OHIO STATE
All-Time UCLA 6-5
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA UCLA 4-1
At Ohio State Ohio State 4-1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
3/8/25 N W 75-46
2/5/25 H W 65-52
12/18/23 A W 77-71
12/21/04 A L 60-83
12/30/03 H W 71-56
11/24/01 H W 64-60
12/21/00 A L 57-79
12/22/92 A L 80-91
12/18/91 H W 72-58
12/20/89 A L 57-66
12/30/88 H L 46-63
OKLAHOMA
All-Time UCLA 4-3
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 3-1
At Oklahoma Tied 1-1
Neutral Oklahoma 1-0
NCAA Tournament Tied 1-1
3/20/23 H W 82-73
11/24/13 H W 82-76
3/25/13 N L 72-85
11/14/12 A W 86-80
11/21/06 H L 68-77
12/5/05 A L 78-83
1/8/82 H W 82-63
OKLAHOMA STATE
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At Oklahoma State OSU 1-0
12/16/18 H W 71-59
12/8/17 A L 72-87
1/8/85 H W 76-57
OLD DOMINION
All-Time ODU 8-4
Streak ODU +1 At UCLA ODU 3-2
At Old Dominion ODU 4-1
Neutral Tied 1-1
12/18/00 A L 62-86
12/29/99 H W 82-76
12/19/90 A W 80-66
12/30/89 H L 64-68
1/4/85 A L 58-74
1/17/84 H W 76-74
1/7/82 H L 60-85
1/6/81 A L 74-91
1/11/80 H L 45-73
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
3/22/79 N L 82-87
1/3/79 A L 60-90
3/18/77 N W 66-59
OLE MISS
All-Time
UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
3/28/25 N W 76-62
ORAL ROBERTS
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
12/17/78 H W 85-64
OREGON
All-Time UCLA 44-37
Streak UCLA +5
At UCLA UCLA 25-13
At UCLA (Pauley) UCLA 22-11
At UCLA (Wooden) Tied 2-2
At Oregon Oregon 21-18
Neutral Oregon 2-1
Conference Games UCLA 42-33
Conference Tournament Oregon 3-1
2/9/25 A W 62-52
2/18/24 A W 74-55
1/5/24 H W 75-49
2/12/23 H W 67-57
12/30/22 A W 82-74
3/3/22 N L 60-63
2/16/22 A L 53-67
1/28/22 A L Forfeit
2/19/21 H W 83-56
1/3/21 A W 73-71
2/14/20 H L 66-80
3/9/19 N L 83-88 (ot)
2/22/19 A W 74-69
1/13/19 H L 52-72
3/3/18 N L 62-65
2/19/18 A L 94-101 (ot)
1/7/18 H L 61-70
2/10/17 A L 75-84
1/15/17 H W 79-63
2/19/16 A W 77-72
1/2/16 H W 80-69
1/31/15 A L 65-67
1/5/15 H L 46-62
2/17/14 A W 103-83
1/17/14 H W 88-83
1/4/13 A W 89-80
1/21/12 H* L 62-83
2/10/11 A W 75-48
1/15/11 H W 87-57
2/27/10 A W 91-75
1/28/10 H W 104-80
3/5/09 A W 70-69
1/4/09 H L 56-73
2/23/08 A L 55-66
1/24/08 H W 63-59
2/1/07 A L 60-76
1/7/07 H W 77-70
2/25/06 A W 66-65
12/20/05 H W 82-63
1/27/05 A L 71-78
1/4/05 H W 70-54
1/29/04 H L 55-61
1/4/04 A W 63-57
3/8/03 N W 71-58
3/1/03 H W 56-54
12/27/02 A W 93-68
1/26/02 A L 54-76
12/20/01 H L 67-76
2/23/01 H W 70-68
1/27/01 A L 43-54
2/24/00 A L 72-89
1/29/00 H L 58-67
2/4/99 A L 79-106
1/10/99 H W 76-72
1/10/98 A W 80-75
3/1/97 A L 61-64
1/31/97 H L 64-76
3/2/96 H W 83-64
2/1/96 A L 48-75
3/11/95 A L 65-83
1/5/95 H L 59-84
3/12/94 H L 68-76
1/6/94 A L 77-82
2/13/93 A L 78-89
1/13/93 H W 79-75
3/14/92 A W 83-76
1/10/92 H* W 91-72
2/22/91 A W 82-74
1/27/91 H* W 93-67
2/23/90 H W 79-65
1/27/90 A L 66-80
3/3/89 H* L 60-76
2/4/89 A L 65-75
2/5/88 A W 74-65
1/8/88 H W 77-70
2/21/87 A L 57-77
1/15/87 H W 75-71
12/23/82 A L 59-74
1/30/82 H W 90-74
12/6/80 H W 92-88
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
OREGON STATE
All-Time UCLA 51-32
Streak OSU +1
At UCLA UCLA 30-9
At UCLA (Pauley) UCLA 23-9
At UCLA (Wooden) UCLA 5-0
At Oregon State OSU 20-17
Neutral UCLA 4-3
Pac-10/12 Games UCLA 44-28
Pac-10/12 Tournament Tied 2-2
2/16/24 A L 77-79
1/7/24 H W 65-54
2/10/23 H W 62-54
1/1/23 A L 72-77
3/27/22 A W 74-66
1/30/22 A L 58-72
2/21/21 H L 64-71
2/17/20 H W 83-74 (ot)
2/24/19 A L 72-75
1/11/19 H L 73-83
2/16/18 A L 64-67 (ot)
1/5/18 H W 84-49
3/4/17 N L 53-63
2/12/17 A L 61-68
1/13/17 H W 66-56
3/6/16 N L 57-69
2/21/16 A L 54-64
1/4/16 H W 71-51
2/2/15 A L 64-82
1/3/15 H L 47-65
2/14/14 A L 54-70
1/20/14 H W 66-63
1/6/13 A W 68-64
1/19/12 H* W 69-60
2/12/11 A W 58-48
1/13/11 H W 58-46
3/12/10 N W 60-44
2/25/10 A W 74-53
1/30/10 H W 70-44
3/13/09 N W 62-56
3/7/09 A L 58-61
1/2/09 H W 60-53
2/21/08 A W 55-52
1/26/08 H W 74-70
2/3/07 A W 75-65
1/5/07 H L 52-56
2/23/06 A W 72-59
12/22/05 H W 79-64
1/29/05 A W 74-54
1/2/05 H W 73-45
1/31/04 H W 91-58
1/2/04 A L 68-82
12/29/02 A W 58-54
1/24/02 A L 36-77
12/22/01 H L 65-79
2/25/01 H L 57-65
1/25/01 A L 58-71
2/26/00 A L 52-72
1/27/00 H W 83-60
2/6/99 A W 90-68
1/8/99 H W 105-50
2/6/98 H W 81-70
1/8/98 A W 76-70
2/27/97 A W 79-68
2/2/97 H W 77-54
2/29/96 H W 68-56
2/3/96 A L 70-82
3/9/95 A L 75-95
1/7/95 H W 84-73
3/10/94 H L 62-83
1/8/94 A W 76-61
2/11/93 A L 68-71
1/16/93 H L 67-71
3/12/92 A W 71-70
1/12/92 H* W 89-71
2/24/91 A L 83-89
1/25/91 H* W 66-55
2/25/90 H* W 74-55
1/25/90 A W 82-60
3/4/89 H* W 77-61
2/3/89 A L 58-81
2/6/88 A W 77-60
1/7/88 H W 66-51
2/20/87 A W 65-53
1/17/87 H L 69-74
12/30/83 H W 67-49
3/19/83 N L 62-75
12/22/82 A L 71-81
3/18/81 H W 72-65
12/18/79 N W 77-76
3/16/79 N W 105-70
12/11/76 H W 125-35
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
PACIFIC
All-Time UCLA 5-0
Streak UCLA +5
At UCLA UCLA 5-0
12/15/19 H W 68-57
11/11/16 H W 82-55
1/21/84 H W 91-71
12/3/82 H W 89-62
12/8/79 H W 102-41
PENN STATE
All-Time UCLA 3-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA Tied 1-1
Neutral UCLA 2-0
Big Ten Games UCLA 1-0
2/15/25 N W 83-67
2/6/83 H L 70-79
12/22/80 H W 85-74
12/29/78 N W 85-81
PEPPERDINE
All-Time UCLA 18-3
Streak UCLA +5
At UCLA UCLA 11-1
At Pepperdine UCLA 6-2
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/12/24 H W 91-54
11/10/21 H W 78-69
11/11/13 H W 82-78
12/28/12 A W 77-46
11/18/08 H W 66-55
11/28/07 A L 79-91
12/8/05 H W 95-56
12/2/04 A W 74-61
12/14/02 A L 67-88
12/28/00 H L 56-78
12/11/99 A W 86-67
12/30/98 H W 85-51
H
PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE
PRINCETON
PURDUE
RICE
RICHMOND
RUTGERS
SACRAMENTO STATE
2/6/98 H W 82-54
2/27/03 H W 82-71
12/30/92 N W 100-52
SAINT JOHN’S
All-Time UCLA 3-0
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At St. John’s UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/28/21 N W 73-65
11/13/15 H W 73-58
12/16/12 A W 53-52 (ot)
SAINT JOSEPH’S
All-Time Tied 1-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At Saint Joseph’s St. Joseph’s 1-0
12/31/12 H W 73-65
12/22/11 A L 60-64
SAINT MARY’S
All-Time UCLA 7-2
Streak UCLA +4
At UCLA UCLA 5-0
At Saint Mary’s St. Mary’s 2-1
Neutral UCLA 1-0 WNIT UCLA 1-0
3/29/15 H W 82-66
12/15/12 N W 76-62
12/12/10 A W 75-59
12/21/09 H W 83-58
12/6/03 A L 52-53
12/3/02 H W 72-60
11/21/97 A L 63-83
12/16/96 H W 76-67
12/7/90 H W 90-82
SAMFORD
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/19/14 N W 71-52
SAN DIEGO
All-Time UCLA 9-3
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 5-1
At San Diego UCLA 4-2 WNIT UCLA 1-0
3/22/15 A W 63-58
12/14/08 H W 95-58
12/8/07 A L 57-63
12/5/01 A L 51-79
11/28/00 H L 67-86
12/5/97 H W 87-69
11/23/96 A W 73-61
11/24/95 H W 87-69
12/8/94 A W 83-73
12/1/93 H W 82-62
1/5/91 A W 78-70
12/13/86 H* W 65-42
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
SAN DIEGO STATE
All-Time UCLA 25-6
Streak UCLA +6 At UCLA UCLA 12-2
At San Diego State UCLA 12-4
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/15/13 A W 56-55
11/10/12 H W 66-52
11/30/11 H* W 78-71
11/12/10 A W 55-48
12/9/99 H W 82-61
12/11/98 A W 104-56
12/6/92 H* L 52-77
1/3/92 A W 82-59
12/29/86 H* W 81-56
1/28/86 A L 77-96
2/27/85 H W 86-64
1/19/85 A L 68-77
2/15/84 H L 68-71
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
2/23/83 H W 100-58
1/29/83 A W 72-56
3/3/82 H W 76-51
2/2/82 A W 70-64
3/14/81 N W 61-54
3/6/81 H W 82-61
2/3/81 A L 56-64
2/7/80 H W 95-63
1/8/80 A W 73-60
2/23/79 A W 84-51
1/25/79 H W 90-30
2/22/78 H W 104-44
1/28/78 A W 96-49
2/25/77 A W 98-45
1/25/77 H W 93-42
2/4/76 A W 91-39
1/15/75 A W 84-36
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
SAN FRANCISCO
All-Time UCLA 4-2
Streak San Francisco +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At San Francisco Tied 1-1
Neutral Tied 1-1
12/10/93 A L 68-71
12/8/84 H W 81-58
3/12/81 N W 92-68
12/20/80 H W 90-65
3/8/80 N L 60-74
12/1/78 A W 73-58
SAN JOSÉ STATE
All-Time UCLA 7-0
Streak UCLA +7
At UCLA UCLA 4-0
At San José State UCLA 3-0
12/5/21 H W 112-33
11/10/17 H W 129-69
11/22/80 A W 78-63
3/6/80 A W 81-66
12/9/78 H W 71-65
12/8/77 H W 85-70
1/14/77 A W 80-42
SANTA CLARA
All-Time
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE
All-Time SDSU 2-1
Streak UCLA +1
At SDSU SDSU 1-0
Neutral SDSU 2-1
11/19/22 N W 72-65
3/31/22 A L 59-62
11/27/21 N L 66-76
SOUTHERN
All-Time UCLA 3-0
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/18/16 H W 95-47
12/2/07 N W 79-52
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At Southern Illinois UCLA 1-0
12/19/81 A W 85-44
SOUTHERN UTAH
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
1/10/89 H W 79-51
SOUTH FLORIDA
All-Time Tied 1-1
Streak USF +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
Neutral USF 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
11/24/18 N L 56-60
3/21/16 H W 72-67
STANFORD
All-Time Stanford 65-28
Streak Stanford +1
At UCLA Stanford 27-13
At UCLA (Pauley) Stanford 25-12
At UCLA (Wooden) Stanford 2-1
At Stanford Stanford 31-11
Neutral Stanford 11-4
2/2/08 A L 62-75
1/4/08 H W 69-56
2/22/07 A L 54-65
12/22/06 H L 59-68
3/6/06 N W 85-76 (ot)
1/27/06 H W 90-80
1/1/06 A L 68-91
2/20/05 H L 68-81
1/20/05 A L 75-100
3/7/04 N L 66-70
2/21/04 A L 54-63
1/23/04 H L 71-78 (ot)
3/9/03 N L 64-69
2/22/03 A L 61-79
1/24/03 H L 78-80
3/2/02 N L 61-96
2/24/02 H L 80-98
12/28/01 A L 50-81
3/3/01 A L 69-83
2/2/01 H L 52-60
3/3/00 H W 64-61
2/3/00 A L 68-83
2/12/99 H L 84-87
1/16/99 A W 80-72
2/13/98 A L 80-105
1/18/98 H L 70-75
2/18/97 A L 68-98
1/10/97 H L 62-74
2/11/96 H L 59-61
1/11/96 A L 77-81
2/25/95 H L 49-84
1/26/95 A L 49-88
2/26/94 A L 82-94
1/28/94 H W 80-73
2/18/93 H L 54-71
1/21/93 A L 70-79
2/14/92 H L 69-92
1/18/92 A L 92-95
2/17/91 H L 77-91
1/17/91 A L 74-91
2/17/90 A L 65-91
1/18/90 H L 80-98
3/10/89 A L 66-104
1/7/89 H* L 71-73
3/12/88 A W 75-74
3/4/88 H W 74-64
2/7/87 H* W 64-49
1/2/87 A L 60-62
2/22/86 H W 65-43
1/24/86 A W 65-62
3/2/85 A W 75-61
TENNESSEE
1/28/84 A L 68-82 11/28/10 H W
TEXAS
UCLA 3-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At Santa Clara SC 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/15/09 N W 77-51
12/12/93 A L 72-78
1/4/93 H W 63-54
12/1/91 H W 91-78
SETON HALL
All-Time
UCLA 3-1
Streak UCLA +3
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At Seton Hall Tied 1-1
11/18/18 H W 78-62
12/17/17 A W 77-68
12/28/97 H W 88-58
12/21/96 A L 53-69
SOUTH CAROLINA
All-Time SC 4-2
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA Tied 1-1
At South Carolina SC 2-1
Neutral SC 1-0
11/24/24 H W 77-62
3/25/23 N L 43-59
11/29/22 A L 64-73
12/18/16 A L 57-66
11/22/15 H L 65-68
1/5/81 A W 81-86* * - Game forfeited by South Carolina
Pac-10/12 Games Stanford 58-13
Pac-10/12 Tournament Stanford 11-2
2/4/24 A L 60-80
3/3/23 N W 69-65
2/20/23 A L 66-71
1/13/23 H L 59-72
2/3/22 H L 48-76
3/7/21 N L 55-75
1/22/21 N W 70-66
12/21/20 H L 49-61
3/7/20 N L 51-67
2/7/20 A W 79-69
1/6/19 A L 80-86
2/15/19 H L 51-65
1/21/18 H W 64-53
12/28/17 A L 65-76
2/6/17 A W 85-76
1/24/16 H W 56-36
3/6/15 N L 62-67
2/15/15 A L 50-68
1/23/15 H L 70-79
2/23/14 H L 56-65
1/24/14 A L 55-72
3/10/13 N L 49-51
2/17/13 H L 57-68
1/18/13 A L 49-75
2/12/12 A L 59-82
12/31/11 H* L 50-77
3/12/11 N L 55-64
2/20/11 H L 53-67
1/20/11 A L 38-64
3/14/10 N L 46-70
2/4/10 A L 53-74
1/10/10 H L 61-65
3/14/09 N L 47-73
2/27/09 H L 58-69
2/1/09 A L 51-68
3/9/08 N L 45-78
2/1/85 H W 72-58
2/17/84 H W 68-48
1/20/84 A W 83-51
3/5/83 H W 92-69
12/30/82 A W 70-68
11/24/80 A W 78-67
12/15/79 H W 88-63
3/8/79 N W 85-68
3/9/78 A W 80-54
2/11/78 A W 99-69
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
STEPHEN F. AUSTIN
All-Time Tied 2-2
Streak SFA +2
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At SFA SFA 1-0
Neutral Tied 1-1
11/27/87 N L 61-71
3/3/79 A L 64-99
3/18/78 N W 86-60
2/18/78 H W 85-74
STETSON
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
NCAA Tournament UCLA 1-0
3/23/13 N W 66-49
TEMPLE
All-Time Tied 1-1
Streak Temple +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At Temple Temple 1-0
12/20/11 A L 53-59
TEXAS A&M
TEXAS TECH
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
TOLEDO
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/25/16 N W 75-73
TROY
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/13/22 H W 95-83
UAB
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
2/4/83 H W 74-68
UC DAVIS
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
11/21/10 H W 65-49
UC IRVINE
All-Time UCLA 10-0
Streak UCLA +10
At UCLA UCLA 6-0
At UC Irvine UCLA 4-0
3/18/22 h w 61-48
12/16/15 H W 83-48
12/4/06 A W 66-62
11/30/05 H W 92-54
12/9/95 A W 73-59
11/28/94 H W 86-74
12/29/87 A W 84-54
11/30/86 H* W 68-58
11/18/80 H W 96-30
1/9/75 A W 106-13
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
UC RIVERSIDE
All-Time UCLA 9-0
Streak UCLA +9
At UCLA UCLA 6-0
At UC Riverside UCLA 3-0
11/9/23 H W 90-52
11/10/22 H W 64-43
11/28/17 H W 68-48
12/28/15 A W 70-56
12/10/14 H W 57-43
12/21/07 H W 71-60
11/18/06 A W 70-60
1/29/75 H W 78-22
1/13/75 A W 92-15
UC SANTA BARBARA
All-Time UCLA 16-2
Streak UCLA +7
At UCLA UCLA 8-1
At UC Santa Barbara UCLA 6-1
Neutral UCLA 2-0
12/3/22 A W 68-57
12/9/20 H W 102-45
12/3/17 H W 74-44
12/14/16 A W 71-52
11/14/10 H W 66-52
12/15/09 A W 61-49
11/12/06 H W 87-62
12/17/05 A L 81-90 (ot)
11/27/93 H W 71-54
12/7/91 H L 70-78
1/11/86 H W 58-38
12/7/85 A W 78-51
12/15/84 H W 94-31
3/10/77 N W 86-33
2/28/76 H W 101-41
1/31/76 A W 90-71
2/27/75 N W 67-54
UNLV
All-Time UCLA 7-0
Streak UCLA +7
At UCLA UCLA 3-0
At UNLV UCLA 2-0
Neutral UCLA 2-0
11/23/03 H W 61-51
12/1/02 A W 72-64
1/22/82 H W 84-60
3/11/78 N W 100-88
3/13/76 N W 97-77
1/17/76 H W 84-80
2/16/75 A W 99-33
USC
All-Time Tied 54-54
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 29-22
At USC USC 31-18
Neutral UCLA 5-3
Conference Games USC 44-32
Conference Tournament UCLA 5-1
3/9/25 N W 72-67
3/1/25 H L 67-80
2/13/25 A L 60-71
3/8/24 N L 70-80 (2OT)
1/14/24 A L 65-73
12/30/23 H W 71-64
1/8/23 H W 61-60
12/15/22 A W 59-56
3/2/22 N W 73-60
1/23/22 A W 68-58
1/20/22 H W 66-43
2/26/21 H W 93-51
12/13/20 A W 73-52
3/6/20 N W 73-66
1/17/20 A L 68-70 (OT)
12/29/19 H W 83-59
1/20/19 H L 67-72
12/30/18 A W 72-65
2/5/18 A W 84-70
2/2/18 H W 59-46
1/22/17 H W 71-67
1/18/17 A W 74-59
1/10/16 A L 68-71
12/30/15 H W 78-73
1/18/15 H W 71-60
12/30/14 A W 59-52
2/8/14 A L 54-68
12/30/13 H L 54-56
2/24/13 H W 63-58
2/19/13 A W 68-54
2/19/12 A L 54-66
1/14/12 H* L 43-47
2/6/11 A W 74-67
1/8/11 H W 61-42
3/13/10 A W 59-53
2/13/10 H W 74-56
1/17/10 A L 63-70
2/8/09 A L 76-87
1/11/09 H W 87-75
3/8/08 N W 73-52
2/17/08 H L 36-49
1/19/08 A L 56-64
2/10/07 A L 55-62
1/13/07 H L 72-75
2/18/06 H L 73-77
1/21/06 A L 70-73
2/26/05 A L 77-80
12/28/04 H W 62-61
2/29/04 H W 68-64
12/28/03 A L 51-64
2/8/03 A L 68-72
1/12/03 H W 72-64
2/9/02 A L 58-71
1/13/02 H L 57-67
2/10/01 A L 56-61
1/14/01 H W 65-53
2/12/00 A L 69-73
1/16/00 H W 82-62
2/20/99 A W 82-64
1/27/96 A L 77-96
3/3/95 A L 65-70
2/4/95 H L 55-56
3/5/94 H L 66-83
2/4/94 A L 70-85
2/26/93 A L 57-66
1/29/93 H L 60-73
2/22/92 H L 71-73
1/24/92 A L 60-62
3/8/91 A W 83-79
1/5/91 H L 69-73
3/9/90 H W 76-72
1/6/90 A W 83-68
2/10/89 H L 75-90
1/12/89 A W 76-62
2/11/88 A L 63-86
1/15/88 H L 56-67
2/25/87 A L 75-81
1/23/87 H L 72-76
3/6/86 H L 57-89
2/1/86 A L 67-89
3/7/85 A W 57-56
2/6/85 H W 77-73
3/3/84 N L 63-85
2/8/84 H L 60-78
3/9/83 H L 62-82
2/16/83 A L 75-83
3/6/82 A L 83-92
2/4/82 H L 94-97
3/13/81 N L 85-102
2/25/81 H W 87-83
2/6/81 A W 81-79
2/27/80 H L 81-99
2/2/80 A W 71-67
3/9/79 N W 97-81
2/27/79 H W 99-80
2/10/79 A L 68-78
3/3/78 A W 78-50
2/1/78 H W 88-63
3/5/77 A W 94-49
2/4/77 H W 103-73
3/6/76 A W 96-59
2/11/76 H W 90-48
UTAH
All-Time UCLA 20-6
Streak UCLA +2 At UCLA UCLA 9-2 At Utah UCLA 8-4
Neutral UCLA 3-0
Pac-10/12 Games UCLA 16-3
Pac-10/12 Tournament UCLA 2-0
3/7/24 N W 67-57
2/22/24 H W 82-52
1/22/24 A L (OT) 81-94
1/29/23 A L 69-71
2/20/22 H L 70-75
2/12/21 A W 69-58
3/1/20 H W 77-54
1/10/20 A W 84-54
3/1/19 H W 76-60
2/10/19 H W 100-90
2/24/18 H W 78-71 (ot)
1/12/18 A W 81-74
12/30/16 H W 67-56
1/31/16 A W 69-63
2/8/15 H W 58-45
1/9/15 A W 49-46
3/2/14 A W 62-52
1/3/14 H W 55-38
3/8/13 N W 54-43
2/3/13 H W 70-42
1/26/12 A W 65-60
11/21/09 N W 69-33
12/1/01 A L 42-89
11/17/00 H L 42-65
12/28/90 H W 89-83
12/2/89 A L 43-65
UTAH STATE
All-Time
UT-MARTIN
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
Neutral UCLA 1-0
11/29/24 N W 97-37
VANDERBILT
All-Time Vanderbilt 2-0
Streak Vanderbilt +2
Neutral Vanderbilt 2-0
11/26/95 N L 64-70
12/1/84 N L 62-66
VIRGINIA
All-Time Tied 2-2
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA Virginia 2-1
At Virginia UCLA 1-0
11/21/21 H W 69-57
12/1/19 A W 73-62
12/29/95 H L 55-77
12/28/91 H L 55-77
WASHINGTON
All-Time UCLA 41-33
Streak UCLA +8
At UCLA UCLA 25-11
At UCLA (Pauley)
WASHINGTON STATE
UCLA 22-7
At UCLA (Wooden) UW 3-1
At Washington UW 21-16
Neutral UW 1-1
Conference Games UCLA 40-32
12/8/24 A W 73-62
1/26/24 H W 62-44
2/25/23 H W 70-62
1/20/23 A W 51-47
2/13/22 A W 69-61
1/14/22 H W 63-48
3/4/21 N W 58-46
2/7/21 A W 84-50
2/23/20 A L 68-74
1/24/20 H W 85-80 (ot)
2/1/19 H W 76-60
1/25/18 A W 86-69
2/17/17 H W 90-79
1/8/17 A L 70-82
2/14/16 H W 63-59
1/5/16 A L 56-64
2/28/15 A L 61-74
1/31/14 H L 58-70
2/8/13 A W 65-61
1/13/13 H W 85-68
3/3/12 A L 59-67
2/2/12 H* W 79-73 (ot)
3/3/11 H W 60-42
12/31/10 A W 60-48
2/18/10 H W 73-55
1/23/10 A W 69-65
2/20/09 A L 49-59
1/24/09 H W 74-66
2/10/08 H W 75-68
1/10/08 A W 59-57
1/26/07 H W 73-67
12/31/06 A L 67-72
2/11/06 H W 83-75
1/12/06 A L 75-96
2/3/05 H W 86-81
1/9/05 A W 74-63
2/5/04 A W 64-59
1/11/04 H W 65-60
2/1/03 A L 77-111
1/3/03 H W 72-46
2/3/02 H L 48-68
1/4/02 A L 53-86
3/10/01 H W 81-56
1/4/01 A L 54-73
3/11/00 A W 85-66
UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
1/23/99 H W 94-53
2/21/98 H W 87-73
12/20/77 H W 125-62
1/7/00 H W 90-54
2/27/99 A L 85-96
1/28/99 H W 90-53
3/1/98 H W 96-72
2/20/10 H W 93-58 1/21/10 A W 59-56 2/20/09 A W 65-50 1/22/09 H W 83-48 2/8/08 H W 68-56 1/12/08 A W 76-56
3/2/07 N W 72-58 1/28/07 H W 73-70
A W 74-71 2/9/06 H W 77-50 1/14/06 A W 73-63 2/6/05 H W 68-63 1/7/05 A W 89-69
2/7/04 A W 78-57 1/9/04 H W 78-58 1/30/03 A W 86-70 1/5/03 H W 93-51 2/1/02 H W 79-55 1/6/02 A W 76-64
1/11/74 A W 76-42
1/23/98 A W 68-64
2/22/97 A L 74-87
1/24/97 H L 56-60
2/24/96 H W 80-64
1/29/98 A W 80-59
3/6/97 H L 75-76
1/4/97 A L 75-98
3/7/96 A L 48-70
2/12/95 H* W 71-57
1/12/95 A L 80-85
2/12/94 A W 81-74
1/13/94 H W 108-76
3/4/93 A W 77-74
2/7/93 H W 82-75
2/27/92 A W 76-68
2/2/92 H W 80-75
3/1/91 H W 78-70
2/3/91 A L 77-78
3/1/90 A L 72-84
2/3/90 H W 84-74
2/23/89 H W 91-72
1/29/89 A W 82-69
2/27/88 H* W 74-60
1/28/88 A L 52-53
3/5/87 H* W 81-56
1/31/87 A W 67-62
* - Played at the John Wooden Center
WEBER STATE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
11/5/19 H W 85-45
WEST VIRGINIA
All-Time UCLA 3-1
Streak UCLA +1
At UCLA UCLA 2-0
At West Virginia UCLA 1-0
Neutral WVU 1-0 WNIT UCLA 1-0
4/4/15 A L 62-60
11/25/11 N L 54-63
11/22/98 H W 91-76
11/26/89 H W 68-57
WESTERN KENTUCKY
All-Time UCLA 2-1
Streak UCLA +2
At UCLA UCLA 1-0
At WKU WKU 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
12/28/96 N W 73-61
12/4/93 H W 83-71
12/18/92 A L 55-73
WISCONSIN
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1
At Wisconsin UCLA 1-0
Big Ten Games UCLA 1-0
12/28/96 N W 73-61
WYOMING
All-Time UCLA 2-0
Streak UCLA +2 At UCLA UCLA 0-0
At Wyoming UCLA 1-0
Neutral UCLA 1-0
3/24/22 A W 82-81, 3OT
3/22/21 N W 69-48
YALE
All-Time UCLA 1-0
Streak UCLA +1 At UCLA UCLA 1-0
11/26/20 H W 100-65
VS. LOWER DIVISION
TEAMS
Cal Poly Pomona UCLA 9-2
Delta State UCLA 3-2
Hawaii Pacific UCLA 1-0
Montclair State UCLA 1-0
San Francisco State UCLA 1-0
Seattle Pacific UCLA 1-0
UC San Diego UCLA 1-0
Wayland Baptist Wayland 3-1
West Texas A&M UCLA 1-0
ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS
47 Denise Curry, F vs. Oregon State, 12/18/79
43 Natalie Williams, F at California, 2/24/94
42 Dora Dome, F vs. California, 2/5/87
40 Denise Curry, F vs. Cal State Fullerton, 1/20/81; at Cal Poly Pomona, 2/9/80
39 Maylana Martin, F at Oregon, 2/24/00
39 Ann Meyers, F at Long Beach State, 1/18/78
39 Rehema Stephens, G at Stanford, 1/18/92; vs. James Madison, 12/30/90
38 Maylana Martin, F at USC, 2/20/99
38 Denise Curry, F vs. Tennessee, 3/25/79; vs. Stanford, 12/15/79; vs. LSU, 1/16/79
37 Rehema Stephens, G at Tennessee, 12/16/90
36 Charisma Osborne, G vs. Oklahoma, 3/20/23
36 Nirra Fields, G vs. Cal Poly, 12/28/13
36 Nikki Blue, G vs. Arizona State, 3/5/05
36 Denise Curry, F vs. BYU, 12/26/79
36 Rehema Stephens, G vs. Utah, 12/28/90
36 Michelle Greco, G at Michigan State, 11/17/01
35 Nikki Blue, G at Washington, 2/1/03
35 Denise Curry, F at USC, 2/6/81; vs. Memphis, 1/9/81; vs. California, 11/21/80; vs. Cal Poly Pomona, 3/1/80; vs. USC, 3/9/79; vs. USC, 2/27/79
35 Dora Dome, G at Arizona State, 1/8/87; vs. Tennessee, 12/13/87
35 Natalie Williams, F vs. Rutgers, 1/3/94
34 Atonye Nyingifa, F at Oregon, 2/17/14; vs. Oregon, 1/17/14
34 Denise Curry, F vs. San Francisco, 3/12/81; at LSU, 1/5/80
34 Michelle Greco, G vs. Long Beach State, 12/10/00
34 Rehema Stephens, G vs. Stanford, 2/17/91; vs. Oregon, 1/27/91; at California, 1/19/91; vs. Saint Mary’s, 12/7/90; vs. Pepperdine, 12/3/90
33 Lauren Betts, C at Maryland, 1/26/25
33 Michaela Onyenwere, F at Oregon, 1/3/21
33 Nikki Blue, G at Minnesota, 3/21/04
33 Denise Curry, F at Arizona, 2/16/80; vs. San Diego State, 2/7/80
33 Nickey Hilbert, G vs. Arizona State, 1/18/96; vs. USC, 2/24/96
33 Maylana Martin, F vs. Washington, 3/6/97
33 Rehema Stephens, G vs. Washington State, 2/2/92; vs. Arizona State, 2/11/90; vs. Notre Dame, 11/30/90
32 Ilmar’I Thomas, F vs. San Jose State, 12/5/21
32 Charisma Osborne at Washington State, 2/21/20 at Cal 2/2/24
32 Nikki Blue, G at Arizona State, 2/12/05
32 Denise Curry, F at CS Fullerton, 1/25/80; at CP Pomona, 3/13/79
32 Maylana Martin, F vs. San Diego, 12/5/97; vs. Texas Tech, 11/29/96
32 Kristee Porter, F vs. Washington State, 3/8/01
32 Necie Thompson, C at Cal State Fullerton, 1/26/82
32 Sandra VanEmbricqs, C vs. Washington, 2/24/89
32 Natalie Williams, F vs. Arizona State, 2/20/94
31 Charisma Osborne, G at Oregon State, 3/27/22; vs. Cal State Fullerton, 11/27/20
31 Lauren Betts, C vs. Ole Miss, 3/28/25; vs. Colgate, 11/10/24
31 Natalie Chou, G vs. San Jose State, 12/5/21
31 Michaela Onyenwere, F vs. Washington, 1/24/20
31 Nirra Fields, G vs. Oregon, 1/2/16
31 Jordin Canada, G at West Virginia, 4/4/15
31 Jasmine Dixon, F at Oregon, 2/27/10
31 Lisa Willis, G vs. Oregon State, 2/14/06; at California, 2/19/04
31 Noelle Quinn, G vs. Arizona, 2/12/04
31 Michelle Greco, G at Pepperdine, 12/14/02
31 Denise Curry, F vs. Oregon State, 3/18/81; vs. Long Beach State, 2/18/81; vs. Arizona, 2/13/81; vs. Delta St., 1/31/81; vs. Long Beach State, 3/7/80; vs. Delta St., 2/1/80; vs. Wayland Baptist, 3/17/79; vs. Pacific, 12/8/79
31 Char Jones, F at BYU, 11/24/82
31 Natalie Williams, F/C vs. Washington State, 2/2/92
31 Rehema Stephens, G vs. Cal State Fullerton, 12/8/89
30 Lauren Betts, C vs. Richmond, 3/23/25
30 Michaela Onyenwere, F vs. Stanford, 3/7/21; vs. USC, 2/26/21 vs. Maryland, 3/25/19
30 Monique Billings, F vs. Oregon, 1/15/17
30 Jordin Canada, G at UC Santa Barbara, 12/14/16
30 Nirra Fields, G vs. California, 2/21/14
30 Atonye Nyingifa, F vs. Washington State, 2/2/14
30 Noelle Quinn, G at Arizona State, 2/2/06
30 Nikki Blue, G vs. Oregon, 3/8/03; at Arizona State, 1/16/03
30 Kisa Hughes, C vs. UC Irvine, 11/28/94
30 Ann Meyers, F vs. Cal Poly Pomona, 2/14/78
30 Dora Dome, F vs. Washington, 2/26/88
30 Melanie Pearson, G vs. Notre Dame, 11/30/97
30 Denise Curry, F at Long Beach State, 1/22/81; at Long Beach State, 2/20/80; vs. Texas, 12/27/79; at CS Fullerton, 2/16/78; vs. Utah State, 12/20/77
30 Maylana Martin, F vs. North Carolina, 11/28/98; at Arizona State, 1/16/97; vs. California, 1/12/97
30 Anne Dean, G at New Orleans, 1/2/86
30 Susie Swenson, G at Kentucky, 12/21/81
30 Marja VanHelvoort, F vs. Arizona, 2/24/84
30 Natalie Williams, C vs. Washington State, 1/13/94; at Ohio St., 12/22/92
30 Gabriela Jaquez, G vs. Bellarmine, 11/12/23
SINGLE GAME REBOUNDING LEADERS
25 — Monique Billings vs. Washington State, 2/19/17
25 — Natalie Williams vs. Arizona State, 2/20/94
25 — Denise Curry at Long Beach State, 3/10/78
23 — Natalie Williams at USC, 2/4/94
22 — Monique Billings at South Carolina, 12/18/16
22 — Janae Hubbard vs. Arizona, 3/6/99
22 — Natalie Williams at Oregon, 3/14/92
22 — Denise Curry vs. San Jose State, 12/9/78
21 — Natalie Williams vs. Oregon, 1/13/93
21 — Natalie Williams vs. Michigan State, 12/29/92
20 — Jasmine Dixon at Oregon, 2/27/10
20 — Kisa Hughes at Boise State, 12/3/94
20 — Natalie Williams vs. Oregon State, 1/16/93
20 — Ann Meyers vs. Stephen F. Austin, 3/18/78
SINGLE GAME STEAL LEADERS
13 — Sandra VanEmbricqs vs. Arizona, 2/12/87
12 — Ann Meyers at San Diego State, 2/25/77
11 — Jordin Canada vs. San José State, 11/10/17
10 — Nicole Anderson vs. Washington, 2/5/93
10 — Ann Meyers vs. Stephen F. Austin, 3/18/78
9 — Lisa Willis vs. Oregon State, 12/22/05
9 — Dietra Hanible vs. USC, 2/27/80
9 — Jeanne Beauprey vs. Oregon State, 12/18/79
9 — Ann Meyers vs. USC, 2/11/76
8 — 22 times, last by Nirra Fields vs. Auburn, 12/21/13
SINGLE GAME ASSIST LEADERS
16 — Jordin Canada vs. Boise State, 3/18/17
16 — Erica Gomez at Arizona State, 1/5/99
15 — Erica Gomez vs. Long Beach State, 12/6/95
15 — Ann Meyers at Fresno State, 2/13/76
15 — Kristi Moore at Washington State, 1/31/87
14 — Jordin Canada vs. Utah, 2/24/18
14 — Jordin Canada vs. Michigan, 12/11/16
14 — Nikki Blue at California, 1/22/05
13 — Jordin Canada at #8 Oregon, 2/19/18
13 — Jordin Canada vs. #3 Baylor, 11/18/17
13 — Jordin Canada vs. Oregon, 1/15/17
13 — Detra Lockhart vs. Washington, 1/15/94
13 — Mary Hegarty vs. UAB, 2/4/83
12 — Kiki Rice vs. California, 1/15/23
12 — Charisma Osborne vs. USC, 2/28/21
12 — Japreece Dean vs. Oregon State, 2/17/20
12 — Jordin Canada vs. Southern, 11/18/16
12 — Erica Gomez vs. California, 2/14/98
12 — Angel Hardy at Arizona State, 1/15/85
12 — Kristi Moore vs. California, 11/29/87
12 — Ann Meyers vs. Cal Poly, 2/8/75
12 — Mary Hegarty vs. Memphis, 1/9/81
12 — Mary Hegarty vs. Delta State, 1/31/81
11 — Elina Aarnisalo vs. Arkansas, 11/17/24
11 — Lauren Betts vs. Minnesota, 2/2/25
SINGLE GAME BLOCK LEADERS
9 — Lauren Betts vs. Baylor, 1/20/25
7 — Lauren Betts vs. Penn State, 1/15/25
7 — Corrine Costa at USC, 2/8/14
7 — Corrine Costa vs. Auburn, 12/21/13
7 — Corrine Costa vs. Washington, 2/2/12
7 — Corrine Costa vs. California, 12/29/11
6 — Lauren Betts vs. USC, 12/30/23
6 — Monique Billings at Seton Hall, 12/17/17
6 — Monique Billings at Utah, 1/31/16
6 — Corrine Costa at West Virginia, 4/4/15
6 — Natalie Williams vs. Arizona, 3/6/92
5 — Lauren Betts at Ohio State, 12/18/23
5 — Monique Billings vs. San José State, 11/10/17
5 — Monique Billings vs. Arizona State, 1/27/17
5 — Monique Billings vs. Pacific, 11/11/16
5 — Monique Billings vs. Hawai’i, 3/19/16
5 — Corrine Costa at Michigan, 4/1/15
5 — Monique Billings vs. Oregon, 1/5/15
5 — Kristee Porter at Old Dominion, 12/18/00
5 — Malika Leatham vs. Long Beach State, 12/10/00
5 — Lynn Kamrath vs. Virginia, 12/28/91
5 — Sandra VanEmbricqs at California, 2/15/90
5 — Althea Ford at California, 3/11/88
5 — Sandra VanEmbricqs at Washington State, 1/28/88
Career 24.6, Denise Curry (1978-81, 130 games, 3,198 points)
MOST DOUBLE-DIGIT SCORING GAMES
Season
36, Denise Curry, 1980-81, 36 games
Career 130, Denise Curry, 1977-81, 130 games
MOST DOUBLE-DOUBLES (POINTS/REBOUNDS)
Season 20, Natalie Williams, 1992-93 and 1993-94 20, Denise Curry, 1979-80
Career 68, Natalie Williams, 1990-94
MOST CONSECUTIVE DOUBLE-DOUBLES
Season 10, Natalie Williams, 1992-93
Career 17, Natalie Williams, over two seasons, 1993 & 94
MOST 30-POINT-PLUS SCORING GAMES
Season 12, Denise Curry, 1979-80
Career 31, Denise Curry, 1977-81
In a Row 4, Rehema Stephens, 1990-91
MOST 20-POINT-PLUS SCORING GAMES
Season 29, Denise Curry, 1980-81
Career 94, Denise Curry, 1977-81
In a Row 11, Denise Curry, 1980-81
FIELD GOALS MADE
Game 19, Denise Curry (12/18/79 vs. Oregon State) 19, Natalie Williams (2/24/94 vs. California)
Season 390, Denise Curry (1980-81, 36 games)
Career 1,386 by Denise Curry (1978-81, 130 games)
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game
32, Nikki Blue (2/1/03 at Washington) Rehema Stephens (12/28/91 vs. Virginia)
Season 647, Denise Curry (1980-81, 30 games)
Career 2,283 by Denise Curry (1978-81, 130 games)
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Game
.938, Lauren Betts (3/28/25 vs. Ole Miss, 15-16)
Game (15+ FGM) .938, Lauren Betts (3/28/25 vs. Ole Miss, 15-16)
Season .621, Denise Curry (1977-78, 30 games, 280-451)
Career .607, Denise Curry (1978-81, 130 games, 1,386-2,283)
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS MADE
Game 8, Michelle Greco (11/17/01 at Michigan State)
Season 87, Londynn Jones (2022-23, 34 games)
Career 282, Charisma Osborne (2019-24, 152 games)
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game 16, Charisma Osborne (12/11/21 vs. Connecticut)
Season 238, Londynn Jones (2022-23, 34 games)
Career 873, Charisma Osborne (2019-24, 152 games)
FREE THROWS MADE
Game 15, Maylana Martin (3/15/99 vs. Kentucky, 15-15)
Season 154, Monique Billings (2016-17, 34 games, 154-242) Maylana Martin (1998-99, 31 games, 154-216) Career 550, Maylana Martin (1997-00, 116 games, 550-797)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
Game
20, Necie Thompson (2/18/83 vs. CS Fullerton, 11-20) Season 242, Monique Billings (2016-17, 34 games, 154-242) Career 797, Maylana Martin (1999-00, 116 games, 550-797)
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
Game (min. 11 att.)
1.000, Maylana Martin (3/15/99 v. Kentucky, 15-15)
Japreece Dean (3/1/20 vs. Utah, 12-12)
Japreece Dean (12/7/18 vs. Fresno State, 12-12) Jordin Canada (2/3/17 at California, 12-12)
Thea Lemberger (11/11/13 at Pepperdine, 12-12)
Noelle Quinn (2/27/04 v. Arizona State, 12-12)
Michelle Greco (1/12/03 v. USC, 12-12)
Charisma Osborne (2/30/23 vs. Oklahoma, 12-12)
Lajahna Drummer (11/14/14 at James Madison, 11-11) Denise Curry (2/18/81 v. Long Beach State, 11-11) Season .922, Japreece Dean (2018-19, 35 games, 107-116) Career (min. 200 att.) .868, Japreece Dean (2017-20, 90 games, 224-258)
CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE
Career 40, Japreece Dean (2018-19; began 11/24/18 vs. USF; ended 2/8/19 vs. Colorado)
REBOUNDS
Game
25, Monique Billings (2/19/17 vs. Washington State); Denise Curry (3/10/78 vs. Long Beach State); Natalie Williams (2/20/94 vs. Arizona State) Season 360, Denise Curry (1980-81, 36 games) Career 1,310 by Denise Curry (1978-81, 130 games)
REBOUND AVERAGE
Season
13.8, Natalie Williams (1991-92, 23g, 318 rbs.) Career 12.8, Natalie Williams (1991-94, 89g, 1137 rbs.)
ASSISTS
Game
16, Jordin Canada (3/18/17 vs. Boise State); Erica Gomez (1/5/99 at Arizona State) Season 248, Jordin Canada (2017-18, 35 games) Career 697, Erica Gomez (1996,98-00, 113 games)
ASSIST AVERAGE
Season
7.12, Jordin Canada (2016-17, 34 games)
Career 6.2, Erica Gomez (1996, 98-00, 113 games)
TURNOVERS
Game 13, Mary Hegarty (2/6/81 vs. USC)
BLOCKED SHOTS
Game 9, Lauren Betts (1/20/25 vs. Baylor) Season 100, Lauren Betts (2024-25, 37 games)
Career 228, Monique Billings (2014-18, 141 games)
STEALS
Game 13, Sandra VanEmbricqs (2/12/87 vs. Arizona) Season 125, Ann Meyers (1977-78, 29 games) Career 403, Ann Meyers (1975-78, 97 games)
MOST TIMES FOULED OUT
Season 9, Dora Dome, 1986-87 Career 26, Dora Dome, 1984-88
GAMES PLAYED
Season 37, Kari Korver, Monique Billings, Lajahna Drummer (2014-15); Emily Bessoir, Gabriela Jaquez, Londynn Jones, Kiki Rice (2022-23); Elina Aarnisalo, Londynn Jones (2024-25) Career 152, Charisma Osborne (2019-24)
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME BESTS
Points 49, Tina Thompson, USC (1/27/96) FG Made 19, Tina Gunn, BYU (12/26/79); LaTaunya Pollard, Long Beach St. 1/20/83); Penny Toler, Long Beach St. (12/3/87)
FG % (min. 10 made) .875 (14-16), Carol Menken, Ore. St. (12/18/82)
FT Made (min. 15 made) 16, JuJu Watkins, USC (1/14/24)
Opponent 13 (by UC Irvine, 1/9/75, 106-13) Both Teams 76 (at Cal, 2/6/10, 44-32) First Half 10 (at Oregon State, 1/24/02, 33-10) Opponent First Half 4 (by UC Irvine, 1/9/75, 63-4)
FEWEST POINTS SCORED, SEASON
UCLA
1,712 (2001-02, 29 games)
Opponent 980 (1974-75, 24 games)
VICTORY MARGIN
Game 97 (vs. UC San Diego, 1/11/75, 117-20)
Season Avg. 37.5 (1974-75, 24 games)
By Opponent 53 (by Long Beach State, 1/22/85, 118-65)
FIELD GOALS MADE
Game 58 (vs. Oregon State, 12/11/76; Kansas State, 1/20/78)
Season 1,214 (1980-81, 36 games)
By Opponent 50 (by Long Beach State, 1/22/85)
FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game 117 (vs. UC San Diego, 1/11/75)
Season 2,363 (2022-23, 37 games)
By Opponent 93 (by S.F. Austin, 3/18/78) 93 (by Penn St., 12/29/78)
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
Game .695 (41-59 at Washington State, 2/25/99)
Season .515 (1980-81, 36 games, 1214-2356)
By Opponent .655 (by Long Beach State, 1/22/85)
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS MADE
Game 16 (vs. USC; 2/26/21) Season 260 (2024-25, 37 games)
By Opponent (game) 16 (by Stanford, 2/24/02)
THREE-POINT FIELD GOALS ATTEMPTED
Game
34 (vs. Cal Poly, 11/20/16; vs. Arkansas, 11/17/24)
Season 814 (2022-23, 37 games)
By Opponent (game) 46 (by Sacramento State, 12/12/14)
FREE THROWS MADE
Game
36 (vs. Arizona 1/13/91)
Season 642 (1998-99, 34 games, 642-905)
By Opponent (game) 34 (by Georgia, 12/6/02)
FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED
Game
46 (vs. Texas, 11/23/99)
Season 905 (1998-99, 34 games)
By Opponent (game) 52 (by California, 3/11/89)
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
Game
1.000 (17-17, vs. Oregon State, 2/21/21) (10-10, vs. Virginia, 11/21/21) (10-10, vs. Presbyterian College, 11/12/17); (10-10, vs. Michigan, 12/11/16); (10-10, vs. San Diego St., 3/6/81); (10-10, vs. Texas, 12/20/79)
Season .779 (2022-23, 37 games, 473-607)
By Opponent (game)
REBOUNDS
Game
1.000, (20-20, by San Diego St., 2/2/82)
75 (3/10/78 vs. Long Beach State at Stanford) Season 1,573 (2024-25, 37 games)
Average 50.9 (1976-77, 23 games, 1170)
By Opponent (game) 64 (by Louisiana Tech, 1/4/84) 64 (by Cal Poly Pomona, 2/13/79)
ASSISTS
Game
38 (1/20/78 vs. Kansas State)
Season 747 (2024-25, 37 games)
Average 21.5 (1976-77, 23 games, 495)
By Opponent 34 (by Long Beach State, 1/22/85) 34 (by Old Dominion, 1/6/81)
TURNOVERS
Game
38, three times (last at Arizona State, 1/16/97)
Season 812 (1981-82, 36 games)
Average 25.1 (1996-97, 27 games)
By Opponent 48, two times (last by UCSB, 3/10/77)
BLOCKED SHOTS
Game
Season
15 (at Utah, 1/31/16)
198 (2024-25, 37 games)
Average 5.4 (2024-25, 37 games)
By Opponent 12 (at Stanford, 2/2/08; by Long Beach State, 2/13/85; at St. John’s, 12/16/12)
STEALS
Game
25 (vs. Washington State, 1/5/03)
Season 436 (1980-81, 36 games)
Average 13.2 (2002-03, 29 games)
By Opponent 25 (by Vanderbilt, 11/26/95)
HIGHEST ATTENDANCE
Home Game —
Regular Season: 13,659 (12/30/23 vs. USC, Pauley Pavilion; 11/24/24 vs. South Carolina, Pauley Pavilion; 3/1/2025 vs. USC, Pauley Pavilion)
Post-Season: 9,351 (3/25/78 vs. Maryland, Pauley Pavilion)
Avg. Attendance: 5,894 (15 games - 88,407 fans) in 2024-25
Away Game —
Reg. Season: 19,722 (12/21/99 vs. Tennessee, Thompson-Boling Arena)
Reg. Season Conference: 13,648 (1/26/25 at Maryland, XFINITY Center)
Post-Season: 19,731 (4/4/25 vs. UConn, Amalie Arena in Tampa, Fla.)
2024-25 UCLA 66, Louisville 59 W 28-19 N9 11/04/24
2023-24 UCLA 92, Purdue 49 W 27-19 H 11/06/23
2022-23 UCLA 84, Cal Poly 48 W 26-19 H 11/07/22
2021-22 UCLA 78, Pepperdine 69 W 25-19 H 11/10/21
2020-21 UCLA 98, Cal State Fullerton 49 W 24-19 H 11/27/20
2019-20 UCLA 85, Weber State 45 W 23-19 H 11/05/19
2018-19 Loyola Marymount 69, UCLA 63 L 22-19 A 11/06/18
2017-18 UCLA 129, San José State 69 W 22-18 H 11/10/17
2016-17 UCLA 82, Pacific 55 W 21-18 H 11/11/16
2015-16 UCLA 73, St. John’s 58 W 20-18 H 11/13/15
2014-15 James Madison 91, UCLA 87 (ot) L 19-18 A 11/14/14
2013-14 Nebraska 77, UCLA 49 L 13-18 A 11/08/13
2012-13 UCLA 66, San Diego State 52 W 26-8 H 11/10/12
2011-12 UCLA 67, McNeese State 59 W 26-12 H 11/11/11
2010-11 UCLA 55, San Diego St. 48 W 25-12 A 11/12/10
2009-10 Illinois State 61, UCLA 55 L 24-12 N8 11/14/09
2008-09 UCLA 78, Cal State Fullerton 62 W 24-11 H 11/16/08
2007-08 UCLA 81, Cal State Northridge 69 W 23-11 A 11/14/07
2006-07 UCLA 87, UC Santa Barbara 62 W 22-11 H 11/12/06
2005-06 Baylor 93, UCLA 85 L 21-11 A 11/18/05
2004-05 TCU 65, UCLA 60 L 21-10 N7 11/19/04
2003-04 UCLA 61, UNLV 51 W 21-9 H 11/23/03
2002-03 Hawaii 70, UCLA 66 L 20-9 A 11/23/02
2001-02 UCLA 62, Liberty 55 W 20-8 N6 11/16/01
2000-01 Duke 80, UCLA 52 L 19-8 N5 11/10/00
1999-00 UCLA 69, North Carolina 65 W 19-7 N4 11/20/99
1998-99 Notre Dame 99, UCLA 82 L 18-7 A 11/14/98
1997-98 St. Mary’s 83, UCLA 63 L 18-6 A 11/21/97
1996-97 UCLA 73, San Diego 61 W 18-5 A 11/23/96
1995-96 UCLA 87, San Diego 69 W 17-5 H 11/24/95
1994-95 N.C. State 58, UCLA 55 L 16-5 H 11/25/94
1993-94 UCLA 71, UCSB 54 W 16-4 H 11/27/93
1992-93 UCLA 99, CS Fullerton 66 W 15-4 H 12/02/92
1991-92 UCLA 80, Pepperdine 69 W 14-4 A 11/22/91
1990-91 Iowa 81, UCLA 52 L 13-4 A 11/24/90
1989-90 UCLA 73, Eastern Illinois 70 W 13-3 H 11/24/89
1988-89 N.C. State 67, UCLA 60 L 12-3 N1 11/25/88
1987-88 S.F. Austin 71, UCLA 61 L 12-2 N2 11/27/87
1986-87 UCLA 68, UC Irvine 58 W 12-1 N 11/30/86
1985-86 Washington 68, UCLA 50 L 11-1 N3 11/22/85
1984-85 UCLA 74, Pepperdine 49 W 11-0 H 11/24/84
1983-84 UCLA 78, Hawaii 67 W 10-0 A 11/24/83
1982-83 UCLA 96, BYU 86 W 9-0 A 11/24/82
1981-82 UCLA 83, BYU 73 W 8-0 H 11/27/81
1980-81 UCLA 96, UC Irvine 30 W 7-0 H 11/18/80
1979-80 UCLA 102, Pacific 41 W 6-0 H 12/08/79
1978-79 UCLA 73, San Francisco 58 W 5-0 H 12/01/78
1977-78 UCLA 85, San Jose State 70 W 4-0 H 12/08/77
1976-77 UCLA 83, Baylor 79 W 3-0 H 12/04/76
1975-76 UCLA 77, Sacramento State 37 W 2-0 H 12/13/75
1974-75 UCLA 106, UC Irvine 13 W 1-0 A 01/09/74
Note: 1 = at Cincinnati, OH; 2 = at Honolulu, HI; 3 = at Seattle Pacific; 4 = at Lubbock, TX; 5 = at Albuquerque, NM; 6 = East Lansing, MI; 7 = Miami, FL; 8 = Iowa City, IA; 9 = Aflac Oui Play in Paris, France
OVERTIME GAMES
Record in Overtime: 25-19; Triple Overtime: 2-0; Double Overtime: 1-3; Home Overtime: 13-5; Away Overtime: 7-10; Neutral Overtime: 5-4 *NCAA Tournament game
DATE RESULT W/L
03/08/24 No. 6 UCLA 70, No. 5 USC 80
01/22/24 No. 5 UCLA 81, No. 20 Utah 94
03/01/23 No. 19 UCLA 81, Arizona State 70
01/27/23 No. 8 UCLA 70, No. 25 Colorado 73
11/21/22 No. 20 UCLA 66, Marquette 58
03/24/22 UCLA 82, Wyoming 81 at Laramie, Wyo.
01/17/21 No. 8 UCLA 68, No. 25 Washington State 66
02/17/20 No. 8 UCLA 83, No. 15 Oregon State 74
02/09/20 No. 10 UCLA 74, California 70
01/24/20 No. 10 UCLA 85, Washington 80
03/09/19 No. 20 UCLA 83, No. 6 Oregon 88 at Las Vegas, Nev.
01/04/19 No. 18/19 California 79, UCLA 84 at Berkeley, Calif.
11/23/18 Kentucky 75, UCLA 74 in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
2/24/18 UCLA 78, Utah 71 in Pauley Pavilion
2/19/18 No. 8 Oregon 101, UCLA 94 at Eugene, Ore.
2/16/18 No. 15 Oregon State 67, UCLA 64 at Corvallis, Ore.
03/05/16 UCLA 73, California 67 at Seattle, Wash.
12/21/15 California 108, UCLA 104 2ot at Berkeley, Calif.
11/28/15 Notre Dame 92, UCLA 84 at Freeport, Bahamas
11/14/14 James Madison 91, UCLA 87 at Harrisonburg, Va.
12/16/12 UCLA 53, St. John’s 52 at Jamaica, N.Y.
02/02/12 UCLA 79, Washington 73 in Wooden Center
01/29/12 UCLA 62, Colorado 54 at Boulder, Colo.
11/18/10 UCLA 86, Notre Dame 83 2ot at South Bend, Ind.
01/06/08 California 73, UCLA 70 in Pauley Pavilion
12/20/06 UCLA 77, California 68 in Pauley Pavilion
03/06/06 UCLA 85, Stanford 76 at San Jose, Calif.
01/29/06 UCLA 90, California 87 in Pauley Pavilion
12/17/05 UCSB 90, UCLA 81 at Santa Barbara, Calif.
01/23/04 Stanford 78, UCLA 71 in Pauley Pavilion
01/20/01 UCLA 59, Arizona 56 in Pauley Pavilion
11/23/99 UCLA 84, Texas 77 in Pauley Pavilion
12/27/97 UCLA 96, Rutgers 93 in Pauley Pavilion
12/18/97 North Carolina 82, UCLA 78 at Chapel Hill, N.C.
11/30/97 Notre Dame 93, UCLA 91 2ot in Pauley Pavilion
03/09/96 Washington State 88, UCLA 81 at Pullman, Wash.
01/20/96 UCLA 89, Arizona 85 in Pauley Pavilion
02/10/95 Washington 57, UCLA 54 in Wooden Center
01/03/94 UCLA 88, Rutgers 78 in Pauley Pavilion W
03/14/90 Arkansas 90, UCLA 80 at Fayetteville, Ark.* L
01/05/87 UCLA 67, Notre Dame 65 in Pauley Pavilion W 12/30/85
UCLA 82, North Carolina 71 in Pauley Pavilion W 12/07/84 New Orleans 75, UCLA 73 in Pauley Pavilion L
03/10/78
20-POINT,
UCLA 79, Long Beach State 78 at Stanford, Calif. W
20-REBOUND GAMES BY THE BRUINS
Natalie Williams 32 pts., 25 reb. vs. Arizona State 2/20/94
Jasmine Dixon 31 pts., 20 reb. at Oregon, 2/27/10
Natalie Williams 28 pts., 23 reb. at USC 2/4/94
Natalie Williams 29 pts., 22 reb. vs. Oregon 3/14/92
Denise Curry 28 pts., 22 reb. vs. San Jose St. 12/9/78
Natalie Williams 27 pts., 21 reb. vs. Oregon 1/13/93
Natalie Williams 23 pts., 21 reb. vs. Michigan St. 12/29/92
BRUIN QUADRUPLE-DOUBLES
Ann Meyers 20 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists, 10 steals vs. Stephen F. Austin, 2/18/78
Ann Meyers 20 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists, 10 steals vs. Stephen F. Austin, 2/18/78
Ann Meyers 14 points, 10 rebounds, 12 steals vs. San Diego State, 2/25/77
LARGEST WINNING MARGIN BY THE
BRUINS
MARGIN OPPONENT SCORE DATE
+97 at UC San Diego 117-20 1/11/75
+93 at UC Irvine
+69 at San Francisco State
LARGEST
WINNING MARGIN BY OPPONENTS
MARGIN OPPONENT (RANK) SCORE DATE
TOP 10 INDIVIDUAL BIG GAMES VS. THE BRUINS
Svetlana Abrosimova, UConn, 11/17/98*
Kelsey Plum, Washington, 2/17/17*
Kelsey Plum, Washington, 1/8/17
THE LAST TIME...
A Bruin Team Defeated a Ranked Opponent No. 1 UCLA vs. No. 10 LSU (72-65, 3/30/25)
A Bruin Team Scored 100 Points 102 at Long Beach State (102-51, 12/14/24)
A Bruin Scored 40 or More Points
Natalie Williams, 43 vs. California (2/24/94)
A Bruin Scored 30 or More Points
Lauren Betts, 31 vs. Ole Miss (3/28/24)
A Bruin Grabbed 20 or More Rebounds
Monique Billings, 25 vs. Washington State (2/19/17)
A Bruin Grabbed 15 or More
Angela Dugalic, 15 vs. Arkansas (11/17/24)
An Opponent Scored 100 Points 101, by No. 8 Oregon, L 94-101 in OT (2/19/18)
An Opponent Scored 40 or More Points 43 by Giuliana Mendiola, Washington (2/1/03)
An Opponent Scored 30 or More Points
38 by JuJu Watkins, vs. No. 6 USC (2/13/25)
An Opponent Grabbed 20 or More Boards 21 by Teaira McCowan, No. 4 Mississippi State (3/25/18)
UCLA HOME COURT RECORDS
PAULEY PAVILION RECORDS
INDIVIDUAL
Most Points, Game
45, Tina Gunn (BYU) vs. UCLA, 12/26/79
Most Points, By UCLA Player: 42, Dora Dome vs. California, 2/5/87
Most Points, Half 29, Denise Curry (UCLA) vs. Stanford, 12/15/79 Most Rebounds, By Opponent 23, Janell Williams (Rutgers) vs. UCLA, 1/3/94
Most Rebounds, Game 25, Monique Billings vs. Washington State, 2/19/17
Most Assists, Game 18, Annie Troyan (Penn State) vs. UC Irvine, 2/4/83 Most Assists, By UCLA 16, Jordin Canada vs. Boise State, 3/18/17 Most Assists, By Opponent 15, Pam Roberts (Arizona) vs. UCLA, 2/13/81
TEAM
Most Points, Game
129 vs. San José State, 11/10/17 (129-69)
Most Points, Half 72 vs. Arizona, 1/18/80 (72-24) Most Points by Opponent 113, UConn vs. UCLA 11/17/98 (102-113)
Most Points By Opponent, Half
60 (1st half), UConn vs. UCLA, 11/17/98 (54-60) 57 (2nd half) Long Beach State vs. UCLA, 12/15/86 (33-57)
Fewest Points, Game 36 vs. USC 2/17/08 (36-49)
Fewest Points, Half 12 vs. USC, 2/17/08
Fewest Points By Opponent 22, UC Riverside vs. UCLA, 1/29/75 Fewest Points By Opponent, Half 8, UC Riverside vs. UCLA, 1/29/75
Most Points (2 Teams), Game 215, UCLA vs. UConn, 11/17/98 (102-113)
Most Points (2 Teams), Half 114, UCLA vs. UConn, 11/17/98 (54-60)
WOODEN CENTER RECORDS
INDIVIDUAL
Most Points, Game
Most Points, By Opponent
Most Rebounds, Game
34, Rehema Stephens (UCLA) vs. Oregon, 1/27/91
34, Genia Miller (CS Fullerton) vs. UCLA, 12/8/89
25, Natalie Williams (UCLA) vs. Arizona State, 2/20/94
Most Rebounds, By Opponent 18, Genia Miller (CS Fullerton) vs. UCLA, 12/8/89
Most Assists, Game 10, Markel Walker (UCLA) vs. Washington State, 2/4/12; Erica Gomez (UCLA) vs. Cal 2/9/96
Most Assists, By Opponent 10, Mae Ola Bolton (Auburn) vs. UCLA, 12/15/87 Team
Most Points, Game
115 vs. Arizona, 1/13/91 (115-102)
Most Points, Half 62 vs. Arizona, 1/13/91 (62-45)
Most Points By Opponent 102 by Arizona, 1/13/91 (115-102)
Most Points By Opponent, Half 53 by Washington, 2/26/88 (53-34)
Most Points (2 teams), Game 217, UCLA 115, Arizona 102 (1/13/91)
Fewest Points By Opponent 42 by San Diego, 12/13/86 (65-42)
Fewest Points By Opponent, Half 20 by San Diego, 12/13/86 (38-20) 20 by Washington, 2/10/95 (20-20)
TOP BRUIN HOME GAME CROWDS
CROWD DATE SITE AND OPPONENT
13,659 3/1/25 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
13,659 11/24/24 Pauley Pavilion vs. South Carolina
13,659 12/30/23 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
9,530 1/23/99 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
9,351 3/25/78 Pauley Pavilion vs. Maryland*
9,263 11/21/17 Pauley Pavilion vs. UConn
9,160 11/11/16 Pauley Pavilion vs. Pacific
8,841 3/23/24 Pauley Pavilion vs. Cal Baptist**
8,327 2/24/13 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
8,094 2/29/04 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
8,036 01/13/19 Pauley Pavilion vs. Oregon
8,013 2/17/08 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
8,006 2/13/10 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
7,839 3/25/24 Pauley Pavilion vs. Creighton**
7,822 3/23/78 Pauley Pavilion vs. Montclair State*
7,787 1/16/00 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
7,273 11/23/99 Pauley Pavilion vs. Texas
7,258 2/21/98 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
7,241 1/28/24 Pauley Pavilion vs. Washington State
7,190 1/7/18 Pauley Pavilion vs. Oregon
7,134 1/13/07 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
7,074 2/23/14 Pauley Pavilion vs. Stanford
7,036 3/10/01 Pauley Pavilion vs. Washington
6,972 2/28/16 Pauley Pavilion vs. Arizona State
6,855 1/13/23 Pauley Pavilion vs. Stanford
6,783 11/6/23 Pauley Pavilion vs. Purdue
6,725 2/20/11 Pauley Pavilion vs. Stanford
6,675 1/8/11 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
6,674 11/13/15 Pauley Pavilion vs. St. John’s
6,638 1/8/23 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
6,632 3/5/00 Pauley Pavilion vs. California
6,243 11/17/23 Pauley Pavilion vs. Princeton
6,172 1/13/03 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
6,103 1/25/15 Pauley Pavilion vs. California
6,103 1/20/19 Pauley Pavilion vs. USC
Notes: * indicates AIAW tournament game; ** indicates NCAA tournament games; NCAA Tournament not involving UCLA have drawn 6,172 on 3/30/84; 5,365 on 4/1/84.
Dora Dome
Maylana Martin
Rehema Stephens
PAULEY PAVILION
Home to Bruin athletic teams since 1965, Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom is regarded as one of the finest all-around collegiate facilities in the nation and has been the site of numerous illustrious events, from NCAA Championships, Olympic gymnastics, presidential debates, and award shows.
Pauley Pavilion was introduced to the University at the June 1965 Commencement exercises, at which time it was dedicated and named for Regent Edwin W. Pauley, the principal donor to the building fund. Total cost of the Pavilion was provided as follows: $2,000,000 by the State, $1,000,000 by the student body and in excess of $2,000,000 by the alumni with $1,000,000 of the alumni contribution donated on a matching basis by Regent Pauley.
The 126-by-226-foot floor of the Pavilion accommodates three complete basketball courts. The Pavilion has a basketball capacity of 13,800. The single-game attendance record of 13,478 was set on Feb. 12, 1997 when the Bruin men hosted Duke (women’s record of 9,530 set on Jan. 23, 1999 vs. USC).
In October of 1990, a highly-efficient lighting system was installed that doubled the lighting capacity in the Pavilion, and in October of 1999, a new video scoreboard was installed in the multi-purpose facility. On Dec. 20, 2003, the floor in Pauley Pavilion was dedicated “Nell and John Wooden Court”, and players from virtually all of his teams joined Coach Wooden to celebrate the occasion.
Some of the top names in the history of college basketball - players such as Ann Meyers, Denise Curry, Natalie Williams, Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar), Bill Walton, Ed O’Bannon, Candace Parker, Marques Johnson, Reggie Miller, Baron Davis, Earl Watson, Kevin Love, Russell Westbrook, Jason Kapono, Michael Jordan and Pete Maravich and coaches such as John Wooden, Dean Smith and Pat Summitt - have appeared in Pauley. The arena, along with the newly-renovated gym in the Student Activities Center, are the homes of the best “pick up” games in Los Angeles, featuring NBA stars. In addition, the 1984 Olympic gymnastics competition and a historic table tennis match between the United States and China have been held in the Pauley. Entertainers such as Bob Dylan, Bob Hope, Henry Mancini, Frank Sinatra, Luciano Pavarotti, Eric Clapton, Justin Timberlake, Jay-Z, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, The Who, Guns N’ Roses and the Grateful Dead have also graced the Pavilion.
The Pavilion has been the site of two Women’s Basketball Final Fours (1978 AIAW and 1984 NCAA Championships), four NCAA first and second women’s basketball NCAA Tournament rounds (2014, 2016, 2017 and 2018), three NCAA first and second round men’s basketball playoffs (1979, 1981 and 1988), five NCAA men’s basketball West Regionals (1966-69-73-76-84), two NCAA women’s basketball West Regionals (1985, 1995), 13 NCAA men’s volleyball championships (1970-71-75-77-79-84-85-87-89-93-96-00-05-18), three NCAA women’s volleyball championships (1981, 1984, 1991), two NCAA men’s gymnastics championships (1984, 1987), and three NCAA women’s gymnastics championships (1984, 1998, 2004). The Pavilion is also used for intramural sports and Fine Arts events throughout the school year. In September of 2009, Pauley Pavilion played host to a WNBA playoff game between the Los Angeles Sparks and Phoenix Mercury.
Other major events held in Pauley Pavilion were a 1988 Presidential Debate between George Bush and Michael Dukakis, the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards, VH1 Rock Honors, several Nickelodeon’s Kids’ Choice Awards, the 1991 U.S. Olympic Festival basketball and gymnastics competitions and UCLA’s 75th anniversary convocation in 1994, during which President Bill Clinton was the keynote speaker.
Pauley Pavilion was closed for the 2011-12 season as it underwent a multi-million dollar renovation with a target completion date of Fall 2012. Women’s basketball, along with men’s and women’s volleyball and gymnastics, played in the John Wooden Center while Pauley Pavilion was closed. It is located at 301 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095, phone number 310-825-4546.
RECORD VS. OPPONENTS IN PAULEY
A
Elina Aarnisalo — 2025
Moniquee Alexander — 2007-08-09-10
Lori Allen — 1975-76-77
Shalada Allen — 2001-02
Stephanie Allen — 1992
Tonya Alston — 1983
Nicole Anderson — 1990-91-92-93
Izzy Anstey — 2022-23-24
Gennifer Arranaga — 2001-02-03-04
Lisa Arreola — 1979
Allison Arredondo — 1993-94-95-96
B
Chrissy Baird — 2015-16-18-19
Dawn Baker — 1991
Janiah Barker — 2025
Alma Batchie — 1986-87-88
Jeanne Beauprey — 1980-81
Sarah Belavic — 1999
Kellie Bennett — 1995
Emily Bessoir — 2021-23
Lauren Betts — 2024-25
Shari Biggs — 1984-85-86-87
Monique Billings — 2015-16-17-18
Deanna Blackwood — 1977
Nikki Blue — 2003-04-05-06
Sheri Bouldin — 1987-88-89-90
Jalina Bradley — 2000-01-02-03
Tam Breckenridge — 1977-78
Alyssia Brewer — 2012-13
Camryn Brown — 2020-21-22-23-24
Candice Brown — 2008-09
Jaime Brown — 1985-86-87-88
Kennedy Burke — 2016-17-18-19
Mari Burningham — 1996
C Avary Cain — 2025
Recee’ Caldwell — 2015
Doreena Campbell — 2008-09-10-11
Jordin Canada — 2015-16-17-18
Dana Childs — 1986-87-88-89
Natalie Chou — 2020-21-22
Jane Cohen — 1975
Laura Collins — 1991-93-94-95
Terry Condon — 1975
Merja Connolly — 1982
Gina Conti — 2023
Denise Corlett — 1977-78-79-80
Lindsey Corsaro — 2018-19-20
Corinne Costa — 2011-12-13-14-15
Cyd Crampton — 1977-79
Denise Curry — 1978-79-80-81
D Anne Dean — 1983-84-85-86
Japreece Dean — 2018-19-20
Jasmine Dixon — 2010-11-13
Dora Dome — 1985-86-87-88
Lajahna Drummer — 2015-16-18-19
Kendall Dudley — 2025
Angela Dugalic — 2022-24-25
E Nina Earl — 2008-09-10-11
Pat Erickson — 1976
Kendee Eulert — 1981-82
F Moriah Faulk — 2012
Nirra Fields — 2013-14-15-16
Cathy Fitzgerald — 1975
LaCresha Flannigan — 1998-99-00
Althea Ford — 1986-87-88-89
Teik Francis — 1986-87
Tia Francis — 1984-85
Tessa Franken — 1986
Dianne Frierson — 1977-78-79-80
Carly Funicello — 1997-98-99-00
G
Timea Gardiner — 2025
Rebekah Gardner — 2009-10-11-12
Rhema Gardner — 2011-12-14
Melissa Gische — 1992
Erica Gomez — 1996, 98-99-00
Michelle Greco — 1999-00-01-03
Venita Griffey — 1975
Tawana Grimes — 1995-96-97-98
Bev Groot — 1977
HDietra Hanible — 1980-81-82
Angel Hardy — 1982-83-84-85
Shaley Harris — 2018
Kelli Hayes — 2015-16-17-18
Ashley Hearn — 2016-17
Mary Hegarty — 1981-82-83-84
Tierra Henderson — 2006-07-08-09
Paulina Hersler — 2015-16-17
Nickey Hilbert — 1994-95-96
Lauren Holiday — 2013-14
Jean Holm — 1980
Janet Hopkins — 1978-79-80-81
Melanie Horn — 1979-80-81-82
Chantel Horvat — 2018-19-20-21-22
Carla Houser — 1997-98
Janae Hubbard — 1997-98-99-00
Kisa Hughes — 1994-95-96
IChinyere Ibekwe — 2006-07-08-09
Christeen Iwuala — 2023-24
JNancy Jackson — 1975-76
Takiyah Jackson — 1997-98-00
Amy Jalewalia — 1991-92-93-94
Vera James — 1980-82
Natalie Jarrett — 2000-01-02-03
Gabriela Jaquez — 2023-24-25
Kiara Jefferson — 2019-20
Krystle Johnson — 2002-03
Char Jones — 1982-83-84
Londynn Jones — 2023-24-25
Whitney Jones — 2001-02-03-04
Jackie Joyner — 1981-82-83-85
K
Nicole Kaczmarski — 2000
Lynn Kamrath — 1989-90-91-92
Annette Keur — 1984-85
Kari Korver — 2013-15-16-17
Nicole Kornet — 2017
Zrinka Kristich — 1993-94-95-96
Ricarda Kuypers — 1994-95-96
LMalika Leatham — 2001-02
Thea Lemberger — 2011-12-13-14
Judy LeWinter — 1975-76
Consuelo Lezcano — 2004-05-06-07
Eugenie Lewis — 1989
Amanda Livingston — 2004-05-06-07
Detra Lockhart — 1991-92-93-94
Luiana Livulo — 2014-15
M
Mary Madigan — 1984
Maylana Martin — 1997-98-99-00
Brynn Masikewich — 2020-22-23
Melissa Maurin — 2001-02-03
Michelle McCoy — 1983-84
Dorice McFadden — 1983
Susan Mead — 1985-86-87
Ann Meyers — 1975-76-77-78
Michelle Miles — 1988-89-90
Lauryn Miller — 2017-18-19-20
Myra Miyasato — 1975
Beth Moore — 1976-77-78-79
Kristi Moore — 1986-87
Darxia Morris — 2008-09-10-11
DeDe Mosman — 1989-90-91-92
Amanda Muse — 2024
N
Natalie Nakase — 2000-01-02-03
Karen Nash — 1975-76-77
Heidi Nestor — 1976-77-78
Teiko Nishi — 1985-86-87-88
Atonye Nyingifa — 2009, 2011-12-13-14
Christina Nzekwe — 2008-09-10-11
O
Jamie Oenning — 1995-96-97-98
Alexis Olivier — 2007-08
Dominique Onu — 2021-22
Michaela Onyenwere — 2017-18-19-20
Ortal Oren — 2003-04-05-06
Anita Ortega — 1976-77-78-79
Charisma Osborne — 2020-21-22-23-24
Kayla Owens — 2018-19-20-22
P
Michelle Palmisano — 1993
Melanie Pearson — 1997-98-99
Lauren Pedersen — 2005-06
Jaelynn Penn — 2022
Marie Philman —1997-98-99-00
Sissy Pickett — 2002-03-04-05
Julia Pitts — 2003-04-06-07
Lindsey Pluimer — 2005-06-07-08
Kristee Porter — 1999-01-02
Madeline (Brooks) Poteet — 2012-13-14-15
Q
Noelle Quinn — 2004-05-06-07
R
Ayesha Rembert — 1999
Dot Richardson — 1984
Lynn Richardson — 1987
Kiki Rice — 2023-24-25
Brittany Ringel — 2002, 04-05-06
Stacy Robertson — 2001-02
Regina Rogers — 2008
Ally Rosenblum — 2017-18-20
Rachelle Roulier — 1988-89-90-91
S
Jackie Shepard — 2010-11
Eliana Sigal — 2019-20-21-22
Amy Jo Silva — 1992-93
Erin Simms — 1985
Ahlana Smith — 2018
Zania Socka-Ngumen — 2025
Lina Sontag — 2023-24
Rehema Stephens — 1990-91-92
Kacy Swain — 2012-13-15-16
Susie Swenson — 1980-81-82
T
Allison Taka — 2007-08-09-10
Marcy Tarabochia — 1992
Emma Tautolo — 2003-04-05-06
IImar’I Thomas — 2022
Necie Thompson — 1981-82-83
Deborah Thurston — 1981-82-83-84
Molly Tideback — 1989-90
Laura Tomich — 1996-97
Leslie Trapnell — 1975-76
Erica Tukiainen — 2007-08-09-10
V
Herma VandeLagemaat — 1985
Sandra VanEmbricqs — 1987-88-89-90
Marja VanHelvoort — 1984
Gene VanOostveen — 1991-92-93
Aisha Veasley — 1995-96-97-98
Jamila Veasley — 2001-02-03-04
W
Markel Walker — 2010-11-12-13
Dominique Williams — 2014-15-17
Jerica Williams — 2007
Mariah Williams — 2010-11-12-13
Natalie Williams — 1991-92-93-94
Debbie Willie — 1978-79-80-81
Lisa Willis — 2003-04-05-06
Brianna Winn — 2002
Michele Wootton — 1987-88-89-90
Jane Wortman — 1975
Charlene Wright — 1975-76
Lynn Wright — 1977
Y
Nicole Young — 1990-91-93-94
Elaine Youngs — 1989-90
Z
Shaina Zaidi — 2004-05-06-07
Moniquee Alexander
Nicole Kornet
Kisa Hughes
00
Chantel Horvat (2018, 19, 20, 21, 22)
Nicole Kornet (2017)
Moriah Faulk (2012)
Ortal Oren (2003, 04, 05, 06)
0
Janiah Barker (2025)
1
Kiki Rice (2023, 24, 25)
Kayla Owens (2018, 19, 20, 22)
Thea Lemberger (2012, 13, 14)
Nina Earl (2008, 09, 10, 11)
Natalie Nakase (2000, 01, 02, 03)
2
Avary Cain (2025)
Dominique Onu (2021, 22, 23)
Ahlana Smith (2019)
Kari Korver (2013, 15, 16, 17)
Jackie Shepard (2010, 11)
Tierra Henderson (2006, 07, 08, 09)
Brianna Winn (2002)
3
Christina Karamouzi (2026)
Londynn Jones (2023, 24, 25)
Kiara Jefferson (2018, 19, 20)
Jordin Canada (2015, 16, 17, 18)
Madeline Brooks (2012)
Darxia Morris (2008, 09, 10, 11)
Shaina Zaidi (2004, 05, 06, 07)
Ayesha Rembert (2000)
Michelle Palmisano (1993)
4
Lindsey Corsaro (2019, 2020)
Ashley Hearn (2016, 17)
Lauren Holiday (2013, 14)
Christina Nzekwe (2008, 09, 10, 11)
Kristee Porter (2001)
Sarah Belavic (1999)
5
Charlisse Leger-Walker (2026)
Brynn Masikewich (2020, 22, 23)
Lindsey Corsaro (2017, 18)
Recee’ Caldwell (2015)
Mariah Williams (2010, 11, 12)
Alexis Olivier (2007, 08)
Stephanetta Bingley (2005)
Melissa Maurin (2001, 02, 03)
Marie Philman (1997, 98, 99, 00)
Ricarda Kuypers (1994, 95, 96) 6
Zania Socka-Nguemen (2025)
Gabriela Jaquez^ (2025, 26)
Emily Bessoir (2021, 23, 24)
Lajahna Drummer (2015, 16, 18, 19)
Atonye Nyingifa (2009, 11, 12, 13, 14)
Julia Pitts (2003, 04, 06, 07)
Brittany Ringel (2002)
Melanie Pearson (1997, 98, 99)
Marcy Tarabochia (1991, 92)
Michelle Miles (1988, 89, 90)
Tessa Franken (1986)
Herma VandeLagemaat (1985)
Michelle McCoy (1983, 84)
Jeanne Beauprey (1980, 81, 82)
Anita Ortega (1977, 78, 79)
Venita Griffey (1976)
12*
Denise Curry (1978, 79, 80, 81)
13
Luiana Livulo (2014, 15)
Thea Lemberger (2011)
Erica (Latimer) Tukiainen (2007, 08, 09, 10)
Gennifer Arranaga (2001, 02, 03, 04)
Maylana Martin (1997, 98, 99, 2000)
Rachelle Roulier (1988, 89, 90, 91)
Shari Biggs (1984, 85, 86, 87)
Denise Corlett (1978, 79, 80)
Beth Moore (1977)
Charlene Wright (1976)
14
Dominique Willaims (2014)
Mariah Williams (2013)
Lindsey Pluimer (2005, 06, 07, 08)
Natalie Jarrett (2000, 01, 02, 03)
Kristee Porter (1999)
Lynn Richardson (1986, 1987)
Erin Simms (1985)
Mary Hegarty (1981, 82, 83)
Nedra Jerry (1977)
15*
Ann Meyers (1976, 77, 78)
16
Sienna Betts (2026)
20
Charisma Osborne (2020, 21, 22, 23, 24)
Dominique Williams (2015, 17)
Rhema Gardner (2011, 12, 14)
Lauren Pedersen (2005, 06)
Michelle Greco (1999,00, 01, 03)
Rehema Stephens (1990, 91, 92)
Jaime Brown (1985, 86, 87, 88)
Janet Hopkins (1978, 79, 80, 81)
21
Lina Sontag (2023, 24)
Michaela Onyenwere (2017, 18, 19, 20)
Nirra Fields (2013, 14, 15, 16)
Doreena Campbell (2008, 09, 10, 11)
Brittany Ringel (2004, 05, 06)
Jalina Bradley (2000, 01, 02, 03)
Jamie Oenning (1995, 96, 97, 98)
Detra Lockhart (1991, 92, 93, 94)
Ashley Stevens (1988)
Sue Mead (1985, 86, 87)
Dorice McFadden (1983)
Amy Jo Silva (1992, 93)
Teiko Nishi (1985, 86, 87, 88)
Dot Richardson (1984)
Vera James (1979, 80, 82)
Judy LeWinter (1976)
23
Gabriela Jaquez^ (2023, 24)
Natalie Chou (2020, 21, 22)
Kelli Hayes (2015, 16, 17, 18)
Markel Walker (2010, 11, 12, 13)
Chinyere Ibekwe (2006, 07, 08, 09)
Nicole Kaczmarski (2000)
Ayesha Rembert (1999)
Nickey Hilbert (1994, 95, 96)
Nicole Anderson (1990, 91, 92, 93)
Eugenie Lewis (1989)
Jackie Joyner (1981, 82, 83, 85)
Beth Moore (1976)
24
IImar’I Thomas (2022)
Japreece Dean (2018, 19, 20)
Paulina Hersler (2015, 16, 17)
Candice Brown (2008, 09)
Mari Burningham (1996)
Natalie Williams (1991, 92, 93, 94)
Michele Wootton (1987, 88, 89, 90)
Marja VanHelvoort (1984)
Susie Swenson (1980, 81, 82)
Heidi Nestor (1976, 77, 78)
25
Shayley Harris (2019)
Monique Billings (2015, 16, 17, 18)
Amy Jalewalia (1991, 92, 93, 94)
Alma Batchie (1986, 87, 88)
Necie Thompson (1981, 82, 83)
Deana Blackwood (1977)
Patricia Erickson (1976)
30
Timea Gardiner (2025, 26)
Tawana Grimes (1995, 96, 97, 98)
DeDe Mosman (1989, 90, 91, 92)
Karen Crozier (1988)
Kristi Moore (1986, 87)
Merja Connolly (1982)
Jean Holm (1980)
Lisa Arreola (1979)
Tam Breckenridge (1977)
31
Moniquee Alexander (2008, 09, 10)
Amanda Livingston (2004, 05, 06, 07)
Carla Houser (1997, 98)
Zrinka Kristich (1993, 1994, 1995)
Dianne Frierson (1977, 78, 79, 80)
32
Angela Dugalic (2022, 24, 25, 26)
Chrissy Baird (2015, 16, 18, 19)
Alyssia Brewer (2013)
Jerica Williams (2007)
Nikki Blue (2003, 04, 05, 06)
Malika Leatham (2001, 02)
Takiyah Jackson (1996, 97, 98, 00)
Nickey Hilbert (1993)
Lynn Kamrath (1989, 90, 91, 92)
Alice Enriquez (1988)
Mary Madigan (1982)
Annette Keur (1984, 85)
Cheryl Kelsey (1981)
Maria Sandoval (1980)
Tam Breckenridge (1978, 79)
Lynn Wright (1977)
34
Corinne Costa (2011, 12, 13, 14, 15)
Regina Rogers (2008)
Moniquee Alexander (2007)
Janae Hubbard (1997, 98, 99, 00)
Laura Collins (1991, 93, 94)
Denise Corlett (1977)
35
Camryn Brown (2020, 21, 22, 23, 24)
Rebekah Gardner (2009, 10, 11, 12)
Jamila Veasley (2001, 02, 03, 04)
Aisha Veasley (1995, 96, 97, 98)
Stacy Mayeda (1988)
Teik Francis (1986, 87)
40
Lisa Willis (2003, 04, 05, 06)
Kendee Eulert (1981, 82)
Nancy Jackson (1976)
41
Char Jones (1982, 83, 84)
42
Stacy Robertson (2001)
Allison Arredondo (1993, 94, 95, 96)
Althea Ford (1986, 87, 88, 89)
Lori Allen (1976, 77)
43
Megan Grant (2026)
Izzy Anstey (2022, 23, 24)
Nicole Young (1990, 92, 93, 94)
Anne Dean (1983, 84, 85, 86)
44
Emma Tautolo (2003, 04, 05, 06)
Carly Funicello (1997, 98, 99, 00)
Gene VanOostveen (1991, 92, 93)
Molly Tideback (1989, 90)
Dora Dome (1985, 86, 87, 88)
Cyd Crampton (1977, 79)
45
Noelle Quinn (2004, 05, 06, 07)
LaCresha Flannigan (1998, 99, 00)
Kisa Hughes (1994, 95, 96)
Nicole Young (1991)
Deborah Thurston (1981, 82, 83, 84)
50
Kellie Bennett (1995)
Sheri Bouldin (1987, 88, 89, 90)
Tonya Alston (1983)
Anita Ortega (1976)
51
Lauren Betts (2024, 25)
Eliana Sigal (2019, 20, 21, 22)
Elaine Youngs (1989, 90)
53
Gina Conti (2023)
Ally Rosenblum (2017, 18, 19, 20)
Kacy Swain (2012, 13, 15, 16)
Allison Taka (2007, 08, 09, 10)
Whitney Jones (2001, 02, 03, 04)
Erica Gomez (1996, 98, 99, 00)
Chrystal Pakootas (1995)
Dana Childs (1986, 87, 88, 89)
Angel Hardy (1982, 83, 84)
Debbie Willie (1978, 79, 80, 81)
Dietra Hanible (1980, 82)
Beth Moore (1978, 79)
Cindy Harrie (1977)
22
Kendall Dudley (2025)
Christeen Iwuala (2023, 24)
Kennedy Burke (2016, 17, 18, 19)
Madeline (Brooks) Poteet (2013, 14, 15)
Consuelo Lezcano (2004, 05, 06, 07)
Melanie Horn (1979, 80, 81, 82)
Bev Groot (1977)
33
Amanda Muse (2024, 25, 26)
Lauryn Miller (2017, 18, 19, 20)
Jasmine Dixon (2010, 11, 13)
Shalada Allen (2001, 02)
Laura Tomich (1996, 1997)
Dawn Baker (1991)
Sandra VanEmbricqs (1987, 88, 89, 90)
Tia Francis (1984, 85)
54
Sissy Pickett (2002, 03, 04, 05)
Karen Nash (1977)
55
Krystle Johnson (2002, 03)
Karen Nash (1976)
*retired numbers
^changed numbers
Ford
Paulina Hersler
Althea
2024-25 (34-4, 15-2/2nd)*
C Lauren Betts, 6-7, Jr. (20.2, 9.5)
F Angela Dugalic, 6-4, Gr. (7.4, 5.5)
G Gabriela Jaquez, 6-0, Jr. (9.6, 5.3)
G Londynn Jones, 5-4, Jr. (8.5, 1.1)
G Kiki Rice, 5-11, Jr. (12.8, 3.5)
2023-24 (27-7, 13-4/3rd)*
C Lauren Betts, 6-7, So. (14.9, 9.3)
F Angela Dugalic, 6-4, Sr. (8.7, 6.5)
G Charisma Osborne, 5-9, Gr. (13.9, 5.2)
G Londynn Jones, 5-4, So. (11.8, 1.7)
G Kiki Rice, 5-11, So. (13.2, 5.7)
2022-23 (27-10, 11-7/5th)*
F Emily Bessoir, 6-4, Jr. (9.4, 5.8)
G Camryn Brown, 5-11, Sr. (3.0,3.3)
G Gina Conti, 5-11, Gr. (6.6, 3.4)
G Charisma Osborne, 5-9, Sr. (15.9, 5.9)
G Kiki Rice, 5-11, Fr. (11.6, 4.5)
2021-22 (18-13, 8-8/7th)
F IImar’I Thomas, 5-10, Gr. (15.7, 5.9)
G Chantel Horvat, 6-2, R-Sr. (5.4, 4.6)
G Charisma Osborne, 5-9, Jr. (16.4, 5.1)
G Natalie Chou, 6-1, Gr. (9.5, 2.4)
G Jaelynn Penn, 5-10, Gr. (10.5, 4.6)
2020-21 (17-6, 12-4/3rd)*
F Lauryn Miller, 6-1, Sr. (6.7, 4.6)
F Michaela Onyenwere, 6-0, Jr. (19.1, 7.2)
G Natalie Chou, 6-1, Sr. (9.9, 4.3)
G Charisma Osborne, 5-9, So. (17.0, 5.8)
G Lindsey Corsaro, 6-1, R-Jr. (5.0, 3.2)
2019-20 (26-5, 14-4/2nd)**
F Lauryn Miller, 6-1, Jr. (6.6, 5.7)
F Michaela Onyenwere, 6-0, Jr. (18.9, 8.5)
G Lindsey Corsaro, 6-1, R-So. (5.2, 2.3)
G Charisma Osborne, 5-9, Fr. (12.2, 5.8)
G Japreece Dean, 5-6, Sr. (13.6, 3.7)
2018-19 (22-13, 12-6/4th)*
F Lajahna Drummer, 6-1, R-Sr. (9.0, 8.6)
F Michaela Onyenwere, 5-11, So. (18.3, 8.5)
F Kennedy Burke, 6-1, Sr. (15.4, 6.2)
G Lindsey Corsaro, 6-1, R-Fr. (7.3, 4.4)
G Japreece Dean, 5-6, Jr. (14.1, 3.3)
2017-18 (27-8, 14-4/T3rd)*
F Monique Billings, 6-4, Sr. (15.3, 9.5)
F Lajahna Drummer, 6-1, Jr. (6.3, 6.8)
G Kelli Hayes, 6-0, Sr. (6.2, 2.2)
G Kennedy Burke, 6-1, Jr. (10.6, 4.3)
G Jordin Canada, 5-6, Sr. (17.0, 3.7)
2016-17 (25-9, 13-5/4th)*
F Monique Billings, 6-4, Jr. (16.7, 10.5)
G Kelli Hayes, 6-0, Jr. (5.6, 4.0)
G Kari Korver, 5-9, Sr. (8.6, 3.0)
G Kennedy Burke, 6-1, So. (12.2, 4.9)
G Jordin Canada, 5-6, Jr. (17.8, 5.2)
2015-16 (26-9, 14-4/T3rd)*
F Monique Billings, 6-4, So. (12.7, 8.1)
F Kacy Swain, 6-3, Sr. (6.6, 6.9)
G Kari Korver, 5-9, Jr. (7.9, 3.1)
G Jordin Canada, 5-6, So. (16.1, 3.9)
G Nirra Fields, 5-9, Sr. (15.3, 5.4)
2014-15 (19-18, 8-10/6th)^
C Corinne Costa, 6-4, Sr. (5.0, 4.7)
F Kacy Swain, 6-3, Rs-Jr. (4.2, 4.5)
G Kari Korver, 5-9, Rs-So. (10.1, 3.7)
G Jordin Canada, 5-6, Fr. (11.8, 3.4)
G Nirra Fields, 5-9, Jr. (15.0, 5.4)
2013-14 (13-18, 7-1/8th)
C Luiana Livulo, 6-3, Jr. (4.3, 4.8)
F Atonye Nyingifa, 5-11, Sr. (18.2, 8.6)
G Dominique Williams, 5-8, Fr. (0.6, 1.8)
G Thea Lemberger, 5-7, Sr. (15.0, 2.5)
G Nirra Fields, 5-9, So. (17.6, 6.3)
2012-13 (26-8, 14-4/3rd)*
C Alyssia Brewer, 6-3, Sr. (11.1, 7.7)
F Atonye Nyingifa, 5-11, Rs-Jr. (11.6, 7.1)
F Markel Walker, 6-1,Sr. (10.6, 7.2)
G Thea Lemberger, 5-7, Jr. (8.6, 2.3)
G Mariah Williams, 5-4, Sr. (3.8, 1.8)
2011-12 (14-16, 9-9/T5th)
F Markel Walker, 6-1, Jr. (14.9, 11.0)
F Rhema Gardner, 6-1, So. (3.6, 4.5)
G Rebekah Gardner, 6-1,Sr. (15.9, 6.4)
G Thea Lemberger, 5-7, So. (12.0, 2.3)
G Mariah Williams, 5-4, Jr. (4.6, 2.1)
2010-11 (28-5, 16-2/2nd)*
F Markel Walker, 6-1, So. (8.5, 5.4)
F Jasmine Dixon, 6-0, Jr. (12.1, 7.3)
F Atonye Nyingifa, 5-11,So.R (8.8, 5.4)
G Darxia Morris, 5-8, Sr. (12.2, 3.2)
G Doreena Campbell, 5-10, Sr. (9.2, 3.2)
2009-10 (25-9, 15-3/2nd)*
F Markel Walker, 6-1, Fr. (10.8, 7.5)
F Jasmine Dixon, 6-0, So. (15.3, 8.0)
G Darxia Morris, 5-8, Jr. (8.6, 2.7)
G Doreena Campbell, 5-10, Jr. (9.8, 3.2)
G Erica Tukiainen, 6-0, Sr. (7.9, 2.4)
2008-09 (19-12, 9-9/ T4th)
F Christina Nzekwe, 6-4, So. (6.3, 4.8)
F Atonye Nyingifa, 5-11, Fr. (6.1, 4.9)
C Chinyere Ibekwe, 6-4, Sr. (4.9, 6.2)
G Doreena Campbell, 5-10, So. (12.9, 4.0)
G Erica Tukiainen, 6-0, Jr. (8.3, 3.1)
2007-08 (16-15, 10-8/ T4th)
F Nina Earl, 6-1, Fr. (8.7, 3.4)
F Lindsey Pluimer, 6-4, Sr. (14.1, 6.5)
C Moniquee Alexander, 6-6, So. (3.8, 3.1)
G Doreena Campbell, 5-10, Fr. (8.7, 4.2)
G Erica Tukiainen, 6-0, So. (4.6, 2.1)
2006-07 (14-18,7-11/ 7th)
F Amanda Livingston, 6-1, Sr. (7.8, 4.7)
F Lindsey Pluimer, 6-4, Jr. (15.5, 5.7)
C Chinyere Ibekwe, 6-4, So. (7.7, 6.6)
G Tierra Henderson, 5-10, So. (5.1, 3.6)
G Noelle Quinn, 6-0, Sr. (17.2, 6.6)
2005-06 (21-11,12-6/ 3rd)*
F Amanda Livingston, 6-1, Jr. (7.9, 4.4)
F Lindsey Pluimer, 6-4, So. (10.1, 6.4)
G Nikki Blue, 5-8, Sr. (17.0, 5.0)
G Lisa Willis, 5-11, Sr. (16.3, 6.9)
G Noelle Quinn, 6-0, Jr. (16.9, 7.1)
2004-05 (16-12, 10-8/6th)
F Amanda Livingston, 6-1, So. (7.9, 4.4)
F Lindsey Pluimer, 6-4, Fr. (10.1, 6.4)
G Nikki Blue, 5-8, Jr. (17.0, 5.0)
G Lisa Willis, 5-11, Jr. (16.3, 6.9)
G Noelle Quinn, 6-0, So. (16.9, 7.1)
2003-04 (17-13, 11-7/T3rd)*
F Whitney Jones, 5-10, Sr. (5.8, 4.5)
F Jamila Veasley, 6-1, Sr. (1.8, 3.1)
G Nikki Blue, 5-8, So. (15.2, 5.6)
G Lisa Willis, 5-11, So. (14.3, 5.4)
G Noelle Quinn, 6-0, Fr. (15.9, 7.7)
2002-03 (18-11, 12-6/4th)
F Whitney Jones, 5-10, Jr. (6.8, 4.4)
F Jamila Veasley, 6-1, Jr. (3.5, 4.9)
G Nikki Blue, 5-8, Fr. (16.6, 5.5)
G Michelle Greco, 5-9, Sr.R (18.9, 4.8)
G Natalie Nakase, 5-2, Sr.R (4.2, 1.6)
2001-02 (9-20, 4-14/8th)
F Whitney Jones, 5-10, So. (9.5, 5.2)
F Jamila Veasley, 6-1, So. (1.4, 3.1)
C Malika Leatham, 6-2, Sr. (6.2, 5.9)
G Jalina Bradley, 5-7, Jr. (6.3, 3.1)
G Natalie Nakase, 5-2, Jr.R (7.9, 5.1 a)
2000-01 (6-23, 5-13/10th)
F Whitney Jones, 5-10, Fr. (7.2, 4.9)
F Kristee Porter, 6-0, So.R (13.0, 8.1)
C Malika Leatham, 6-2, Jr. (6.5, 5.0)
G Michelle Greco, 5-9, Jr. (19.9, 3.9)
G Natalie Nakase, 5-2, So.R (4.4, 4.4a)
1999-2000 (18-11, 12-6/4th)*
F Maylana Martin, 6-3, Sr. (17.4, 8.7)
F Marie Philman, 6-0, Sr. (7.8, 4.9)
C Janae Hubbard, 6-4, Sr. (10.6, 7.4)
G Erica Gomez, 5-9, Sr.R (6.8, 5.4a)
G Nicole Kaczmarski, 5-11, Fr. (11.7, 3.7)
1998-99 (26-8, 15-3/T1st)*
F Maylana Martin, 6-3, Jr. (18.2, 9.4)
F Marie Philman, 6-0, Jr. (11.1, 5.0)
C Janae Hubbard, 6-4, Jr. (12.5, 7.9)
G Erica Gomez, 5-9, Jr.R (7.1, 6.7a)
G LaCresha Flannigan, 5-7, So. (14.1, 3.0)
1997-98 (20-9, 14-4/T2nd)*
F Maylana Martin, 6-3, So. (18.8, 7.4)
F Marie Philman, 6-0, So. (10.1, 3.8)
C Janae Hubbard, 6-4, So. (11.0, 6.1)
G Erica Gomez, 5-9, So.R (7.5, 5.9a)
G Tawana Grimes, 5-9, Sr. (6.8, 3.4)
1996-97 (13-14, 7-11/6th)
F Maylana Martin, 6-3, Fr. (17.9, 6.5)
F Aisha Veasley, 5-9, Jr. (6.3, 5.4)
C Carly Funicello, 6-4, Fr. (6.8, 4.0)
G Tawana Grimes, 5-9, Jr. (8.6, 3.7a)
G Melanie Pearson, 6-1, Fr. (10.8, 3.1)
1995-96 (13-14, 8-10/T6th)
F Tawana Grimes, 5-9, So. (7.5, 4.1)
F Zrinka Kristich, 6-5, Sr. (11.1, 6.9)
C Kisa Hughes, 6-4, Sr.R (13.1, 8.0)
G Nickey Hilbert, 5-7, Jr.R (16.9, 4.3)
G Erica Gomez, 5-9, Fr. (11.8, 6.5a)
1994-95 (10-17, 5-13/T8th)
F Kellie Bennett, 6-2, Sr. (9.4, 5.2)
F Tawana Grimes, 5-9, Fr. (5.6, 4.0)
C Kisa Hughes, 6-4, Jr.R (16.4, 10.4)
G Nickey Hilbert, 5-7, So.R (11.8, 4.0)
G Ricarda Kuypers, 5-8, Jr. (7.6, 3.3a)
1993-94 (15-12, 10-8/5th)
F Nicole Young, 5-11, Sr.R (5.2, 2.8)
F Natalie Williams, 6-1, Sr.R (23.4, 13.1)
C Zrinka Kristich, 6-5, So. (5.8, 5.7)
G Amy Jalewalia, 6-1, Sr. (14.3, 4.3)
G Detra Lockhart, 5-6, Sr. (11.3, 3.2)
1992-93 (13-14, 8-10/7th)
F Amy Jalewalia, 6-1, Jr. (12.2, 4.6)
F Natalie Williams, 6-1, Jr.R (21.1, 13.5)
C Zrinka Kristich, 6-5, Fr. (3.1, 3.9)
G Michelle Palmisano, 5-9, Fr. (11.6, 3.6)
G Nicole Anderson, 5-5, Sr. (13.3, 5.0a)
1991-92 (21-10, 12-6/T3rd)*
F Natalie Williams, 6-1, So.R (21.5, 13.8)
F Rehema Stephens, 5-11, Sr.R (19.8, 7.7)
C Lynn Kamrath, 6-4, Sr. (7.4, 6.4)
G DeDe Mosman, 5-8, Sr. (11.4, 4.0)
G Nicole Anderson, 5-5, Jr. (8.8, 4.7a)
1990-91 (15-13, 10-8/T4th)
F Nicole Young, 5-11, So. (5.9, 4.4)
F Amy Jalewalia, 6-1, Fr. (7.6, 5.7)
C Natalie Williams, 6-1, Fr.R (14.2, 10.3)
G Rehema Stephens, 5-11, Jr.R (25.3, 8.0)
G Nicole Anderson, 5-5, So. (9.1, 3.5a)
1989-90 (17-12, 12-6/3rd)*
F Sandra VanEmbricqs, 6-3, Sr. (14.1, 9.6)
F Michele Wootton, 6-0, Sr. (10.5, 5.8)
C Lynn Kamrath, 6-4, So. (2.6, 2.6)
G Rehema Stephens, 5-11, So.R (20.1, 6.4)
G Nicole Anderson, 5-5, Fr. (7.7, 3.7a)
1988-89 (12-16, 8-10/T4th)
F Sandra VanEmbricqs, 6-3, Jr. (13.5, 7.8)
F Althea Ford, 6-0, Sr. (6.4, 5.3)
C Molly Tideback, 6-3, Fr. (12.8, 4.5)
G Rachelle Roulier,5-10, So. (8.5, 3.1)
G Michelle Miles, 5-7, Fr.R (4.1,3.3a)
1987-88 (19-11, 12-6/4th)
F Sandra VanEmbricqs, 6-3, So. (10.0, 7.3)
F Michele Wootton, 6-0, So. (7.0, 4.4)
C Sheri Bouldin, 6-3, So. (6.1, 5.6)
G Dora Dome, 5-10, Sr. (19.7, 8.1)
G Teiko Nishi, 5-8, Jr.R (2.6, 4.3a)
1986-87 (18-10, 11-7/4th)
F Dora Dome, 5-10, Jr. (16.7, 6.3)
F Sandra VanEmbricqs, 6-3, Fr. (6.7, 6.0)
C Sue Mead, 6-5, Jr. (3.5, 5.2)
G Jaime Brown, 5-9, Jr. (13.3, 4.1)
G Kristi Moore, 5-6, Sr. (5.9, 4.4a)
1985-86 (12-16, 3-5/4th)
F Shari Biggs, 6-1, Jr. (10.0, 5.0)
F Dora Dome, 5-10, So. (11.6, 5.6)
C Sue Mead, 6-5, So. (4.3, 7.6)
G Anne Dean, 5-10, Sr. (14.3, 3.9)
G Kristi Moore, 5-6, Jr. (6.1, 4.4a)
1984-85 (20-10, 10-4/2nd)*
F Jackie Joyner, 5-10, Sr.R (12.7, 9.1)
F Shari Biggs, 6-1, So. (8.1, 5.2)
C Annette Keur, 6-4, So. (13.5, 7.6)
G Anne Dean, 5-10, Jr. (14.3, 3.5)
G Angel Hardy, 5-7, Sr. (6.4, 6.0a)
1983-84 (17-12, 6-8/5th)
F Char Jones, 6-1, Jr.(12.7, 6.9)
F Marja VanHelvoort, 6-3, Sr. (13.5, 6.7)
C Annette Keur, 6-4, Fr. (15.6, 7.6)
G Anne Dean, 5-10, So. (10.9, 3.3a)
G Angel Hardy, 5-7, Jr. (7.8, 3.6a)
1982-83 (18-11, 9-5/3rd)*
F Char Jones, 6-1, So. (14.2, 7.9)
F Jackie Joyner, 5-10, Jr. (8.8, 5.6)
C Necie Thompson, 6-1, Jr. (16.0, 11.3)
G Angel Hardy, 5-7, So. (7.6, 2.7a)
G Michelle McCoy, 5-6, Fr. (7.9, 3.7a)
1981-82 (16-14, 7-5/4th)
F Char Jones, 6-1, Fr. (11.1, 7.8)
F Jackie Joyner, 5-10, So. (8.0, 5.8)
C Necie Thompson, 6-1, So. (20.0,10.6)
G Susie Swenson, 5-9, Sr. (14.3, 4.6)
G Mary Hegarty, 5-8, So. (5.3, 4.4a)
1980-81 (29-7, 9-3/2nd)†
F Denise Curry, 6-1, Sr. (25.8, 10.0)
F Jackie Joyner, 5-10, Fr. (9.2, 4.6)
C Necie Thompson, 6-1, Fr. (14.3, 8.7)
G Debbie Willie, 5-9, Sr. (6.3, 2.0)
G Mary Hegarty, 5-8, Fr. (7.3, 6.7a)
1979-80 (18-12, 9-3/2nd)†
F Denise Curry, 6-1, Jr. (28.5, 11.2)
F Debbie Willie, 5-9, Jr. (13.0, 4.2)
C Jeanne Beauprey, 6-0, Fr. (8.9, 7.4)
G Dietra Hanible, 5-5, Fr. (5.5, 1.8)
G Dianne Frierson, 5-6, Sr. (8.4, 4.2a)
1978-79 (24-10, 7-1/1st)†
F Denise Curry, 6-1, So. (23.6, 10.0)
F Debbie Willie, 5-9, So. (13.4, 5.6)
C Denise Corlett, 5-11, Jr. (8.4, 7.4)
G Anita Ortega, 5-8, Sr. (16.1, 3.8a)
G Dianne Frierson, 5-6, Jr. (8.4, 3.3a)
1977-78 (27-3, 8-0/1st)†
F Denise Curry, 6-1, Fr. (20.3, 9.1)
F Anita Ortega, 5-8, Jr. (18.4, 4.4)
C Heidi Nestor, 6-1, Sr. (10.3, 7.9)
G Dianne Frierson, 5-6, So. (10.5, 4.4a)
G Ann Meyers, 5-9, Sr. (18.6, 6.3a)
1976-77 (20-3, 7-1/1st)†
F Anita Ortega, 5-8, So. (14.8, 5.8)
F Karen Nash, 5-7, Sr. (8.1, 2.0)
C Heidi Nestor, 6-1, Jr. (5.6, 5.6)
G Dianne Frierson, 5-6, Fr. (12.2, 2.3)
G Ann Meyers, 5-9, Jr. (18.3, 7.3)
1975-76 (19-4, 12-1/1st)†
F Anita Ortega, 5-8, Fr. (14.3, 5.6)
F Karen Nash, 5-7, Jr. (15.3, 5.6)
C Leslie Trapnell, 5-9, Sr. (8.2, 7.7)
G Judy LeWinter, 5-6, Sr. (14.0, 3.6)
G Ann Meyers, 5-9, So. (14.0, 5.6a)
1974-75 (18-4, 9-1/1st)
F Venita Griffey, 5-10, So. (12.2, 8.9)
F Karen Nash, 5-7, So. (8.6, 4.4)
C Leslie Trapnell, 5-9, Jr. (8.3, 6.0)
G Judy LeWinter, 5-6, Jr. (9.5, 3.0)
G Ann Meyers, 5-9, Fr. (18.3, 5.4a)
Notes — * indicates NCAA Tournament team; ** 2020 NCAA Tournament was not contested due to the coronavirus pandemic; † indicates AIAW Tournament team; ^ indicates WNIT champions; record includes (overall, conference/ conference finish)
KODAK 1ST-TEAM
ALL-AMERICANS
1999 — Maylana Martin
1994 — Natalie Williams
1981 — Denise Curry
1980 — Denise Curry
1979 — Denise Curry
1978 — Ann Meyers
1977 — Ann Meyers
1976 — Ann Meyers
1975 — Ann Meyers
USBWA ALL-AMERICANS
2025 — Lauren Betts, 1st Team
2021 — Michaela Onyenwere, 3rd Team
2020 — Michaela Onyenwere, Honorable Mention
2018 — Jordin Canada, 2nd Team
1994 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
1993 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
NAISMITH
ALL-AMERICANS
2025 — Lauren Betts, 1st Team
1994 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
1993 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
AP
ALL-AMERICANS
2025 — Lauren Betts, 1st Team
Kiki Rice, Honorable Mention
2021 — Michaela Onyenwere, 3rd Team
2020 — Michaela Onyenwere, 3rd Team
2018 — Jordin Canada, 3rd Team
2017 — Jordin Canada, Honorable Mention
2016 — Jordin Canada, Honorable Mention
2013 — Markel Walker, Honorable Mention
2011 — Jasmine Dixon, Honorable Mention
2008 — Lindsey Pluimer, Honorable Mention
2007 — Noelle Quinn, Honorable Mention
2006 — Nikki Blue, Honorable Mention
Noelle Quinn, Honorable Mention
Lisa Willis, Honorable Mention
2005 — Nikki Blue, Honorable Mention
2000 — Maylana Martin, Honorable Mention
1999 — Maylana Martin, 3rd Team
Erica Gomez, Honorable Mention
1998 — Maylana Martin, Honorable Mention
KODAK ALL-REGION
2007 — Noelle Quinn, 1st Team
2006 — Nikki Blue, 1st Team
Noelle Quinn, 1st Team
Lisa Willis, 1st Team
2005 — Nikki Blue, 1st Team
2003 — Michelle Greco, 1st Team
2000 — Maylana Martin, 1st Team
1999 — Maylana Martin, 1st Team
1998 — Maylana Martin, 1st Team
1994 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
1993 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
1988 — Dora Dome, 1st Team
BASKETBALL TIMES ALLAMERICANS
1994 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
1993 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
BASKETBALL AMERICA ALL-AMERICANS
1994 — Natalie Williams, 1st Team
FAST BREAK ALL-AMERICANS
1988 — Dora Dome, 2nd Team
FRESHMAN ALL-AMERICA (BKB. TIMES)
1996 — Erica Gomez, 1st Team
YOUNG ALL-AMERICAN (GBALLMAG.COM)
2004 — Noelle Quinn
ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS (COSIDA/CSC)
2025 — Kiki Rice, 1st Team
1986 — Anne Dean, 2nd Team
1982 — Mary Hegarty, 4th Team
1981 — Denise Curry, 1st Team
1980 — Dianne Frierson, 3rd Team
ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT (COSIDA/CSC)
2025 — Kiki Rice
2008 — Lindsey Pluimer, 1st Team
2007 — Lindsey Pluimer, 2nd Team Noelle Quinn, 3rd Team
2006 — Noelle Quinn, 1st Team
Lindsey Pluimer, 3rd Team
1986 — Anne Dean, 1st Team
1982 — Mary Hegarty, 1st Team
1981 — Denise Curry, 1st Team
1980 — Dianne Frierson, 1st Team
BRODERICK CUP/AWARD
1978 — Ann Meyers
VICTOR AWARD
1994 — Natalie Williams
NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR
1978 — Billie Moore
NAISMITH HALL OF FAME
2023 — Ann Meyers, Billie Moore (1976 Olympic Team)
1999 — Billie Moore
1997 — Denise Curry
1993 — Ann Meyers
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME
2016 — Natalie Williams
1999 — Denise Curry Ann Meyers
Billie Moore, coach
FIBA HALL OF FAME
2007 — Ann Meyers
UCLA HALL OF FAME
2025 — Lisa Willis
2020 — Noelle Quinn
2018 — Nikki Blue
2013 — Maylana Martin
2004 — Natalie Williams
2002 — Anita Ortega
2000 — Billie Moore
1999 — Denise Corlett
1993 — Denise Curry
1988 — Ann Meyers
NCAA SILVER ANNIVERSARY AWARD
2002 — Ann Meyers
KODAK SILVER ANNIVERSARY TEAM
Ann Meyers
UCLA’S KODAK ALL-AMERICANS
ALL-AMERICA
2013-14 Jordin Canada 2011-12 Nirra Fields
2008-09 Markel Walker, 1st team
2007-08 Jasmine Dixon, 1st team Alyssia Brewer, 2nd team
2003-04 Lindsey Pluimer, 4th team
2002-03 Noelle Quinn, 2nd team
2001-02 Nikki Blue, 1st team Noelle Quinn, 3rd team 1998-99 Nicole Kaczmarski, 1st team 1997-98 Michelle Greco, 3rd team Nicole Kaczmarski, 3rd team 1995-96 Maylana Martin, 1st team 1994-95 Takiyah Jackson, 1st team Erica Gomez, 4th team 1993-94 Erica Gomez, 3rd team
Takiyah Jackson, 4th team
1988-89 Natalie Williams, 1st team
1987-88 Molly Tideback, 1st team
Natalie Williams, 2nd team
Lynn Kamrath, 4th team
1986-87 Molly Tideback, 1st team
Rehema Stephens, 3rd team
Rachelle Roulier, 4th team
1984-85 Althea Ford, 3rd team
1981-82 Michelle McCoy, 2nd team
1979-80 Necie Thompson, 3rd team
Kendee Eulert, 4th team
1977-78 Kendee Eulert, 3rd team
Melanie Horn, 4th team
1976-77 Denise Curry, 1st team
ESPN HS CAL-HI SPORTS MS. BASKETBALL STATE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
2014 Jordin Canada
2012 Nirra Fields
2008 Jasmine Dixon
1998 Michelle Greco
1996 Maylana Martin
1977 Denise Curry
Denise Curry
Anita Ortega
Ann Meyers 1973 Ann Meyers
1972 Ann Meyers
GATORADE FEMALE HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE YEAR
2022 Kiki Rice
Kodak All-Americans (from left) Ann Meyers, Maylana Martin, Natalie Williams, former head coach Kathy Olivier and Denise Curry.
PARADE MAGAZINE
HS GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM SELECTIONS
Ann Meyers Denise Curry
Natalie Williams Maylana Martin
CONFERENCE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
1999 — Maylana Martin
1994 — Natalie Williams
1981 — Denise Curry
1980 — Denise Curry
1979 — Denise Curry
CONFERENCE FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR
2015 — Jordin Canada (Coaches & Media)
2004 — Noelle Quinn
1997 — Maylana Martin
1996 — Erica Gomez
1989 — Molly Tideback
CONFERENCE COACH OF THE YEAR
2019 — Cori Close (Pac-12; voted by Media) 2010 — Nikki Caldwell (Pac-10) 1985 — Billie Moore (WCAA)
BIG TEN DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
2025 — Lauren Betts (Unanimous, Coaches & Media)
PAC-12 DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
2018 — Jordin Canada (Coaches and Co- by the Media) 2017 — Jordin Canada (Media)
PAC-10 FEMALE ATHLETE OF THE DECADE
1987-96 — Natalie Williams
PAC-12 WBB ALL-CENTURY TEAM (2016)
1990-94 — Natalie Williams
1979-82 — Denise Curry
1974-78 — Ann Meyers
PAC-10/12 SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR
2007-08 — Lindsey Pluimer
PAC-12 TOM HANSEN CONFERENCE MEDAL
2016-17 — Kari Korver
ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS
2025 — Lauren Betts (Coaches)
Lauren Betts (Media)
Kiki Rice (Coaches)
Kiki Rice (Media)
2024 — Lauren Betts (Coaches)
Lauren Betts (Media)
Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
Charisma Osborne (Media)
Kiki Rice (Coaches)
Kiki Rice (Media)
2023 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
Charisma Osborne (Media)
2022 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
Charisma Osborne (Media)
IImar’I Thomas (Coaches)
2021 — Michaela Onyenwere (Coaches)
Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
Natalie Chou (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2020 — Michaela Onyenwere (Coaches)
Japreece Dean (Coaches)
2019 — Michael Onyenwere (Coaches)
Kennedy Burke (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
Michaela Onyenwere (Media)
2018 — Monique Billings (Coaches - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Media - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
Kennedy Burke (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2017 — Monique Billings (Coaches - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Kennedy Burke (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2016 — Nirra Fields (Coaches - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
Nirra Fields (Media - 1st Team)
2015 — Nirra Fields (Coaches - 1st Team)
Nirra Fields (Media - 1st Team)
2014 — Atonye Nyingifa (Coaches)
Nirra Fields (Coaches)
2013 — Atonye Nyingifa (Coaches)
Markel Walker (Coaches)
Alyssiz Brewer (Coaches)
2012 — Rebekah Gardner (1st Team)
Markel Walker (1st Team)
Thea Lemberger (Hon. Mention)
2011 — Doreena Campbell (1st Team)
Jasmine Dixon (1st Team)
Darxia Morris (1st Team)
2010 — Doreena Campbell (1st Team)
Jasmine Dixon (1st Team)
Markel Walker (Hon. Mention)
2009 — Doreena Campbell (2nd Team)
Erica Tukiainen (Hon. Mention)
2008 — Lindsey Pluimer (1st Team)
Doreena Campbell (Hon. Mention)
2007 — Noelle Quinn (1st Team)
Lindsey Pluimer (Hon. Mention)
2006 — Nikki Blue (1st Team)
Lisa Willis (1st Team)
Noelle Quinn (1st Team)
2005 — Nikki Blue (1st Team)
Lisa Willis (1st Team)
Noelle Quinn (Hon. Mention)
2004 — Nikki Blue (1st Team)
Noelle Quinn (1st Team)
Lisa Willis (Hon. Mention)
2003 — Michelle Greco (1st Team)
Nikki Blue (1st Team)
2002 — Natalie Nakase (Hon. Mention)
2001 — Michelle Greco (1st Team)
2000 — Maylana Martin (1st Team)
Janae Hubbard (Hon. Mention)
Michelle Greco (Hon. Mention)
1999 — Maylana Martin (1st Team)
Erica Gomez (1st Team)
LaCresha Flannigan (1st Team)
Janae Hubbard (Hon. Mention)
1998 — Maylana Martin (1st Team)
Erica Gomez (1st Team)
Tawana Grimes (Hon. Mention)
1997 — Maylana Martin (1st Team)
Tawana Grimes (Hon. Mention)
1996 — Nickey Hilbert (1st Team)
Erica Gomez (Hon. Mention)
1995 — Kisa Hughes (1st Team)
1994 — Natalie Williams (1st Team)
1993 — Natalie Williams (1st Team)
Nicole Anderson (1st Team)
1992 — Natalie Williams (1st Team)
Rehema Stephens (1st Team)
1991 — Rehema Stephens (1st Team)
1990 — Rehema Stephens (1st Team)
Sandra VanEmbricqs (1st Team)
1989 — Sandra VanEmbricqs (1st Team)
1988 — Dora Dome (1st Team)
1987 — Dora Dome (1st Team)
Jaime Brown (Hon. Mention)
1986 — Anne Dean (1st Team)
Jaime Brown (2nd Team)
Shari Biggs (2nd Team)
1985 — Jackie Joyner (1st Team)
Anne Dean (2nd Team)
Annette Keur (2nd Team)
1984 — Annette Keur (2nd Team)
Marja VanHelvoort (2nd Team)
Anne Dean (Hon. Mention)
1983 — Necie Thompson (2nd Team)
Char Jones (Hon. Mention)
1982 — Necie Thompson (1st Team)
Susie Swenson (Hon. Mention)
1981 — Denise Curry (1st Team)
Necie Thompson (2nd Team)
1980 — Denise Curry (1st Team)
Debbie Willie (2nd Team)
1979 — Denise Curry (1st Team)
Anita Ortega (1st Team)
Debbie Willie (2nd Team)
Dianne Frierson (Hon. Mention)
1978 — Ann Meyers (1st Team)
Denise Curry (1st Team)
Anita Ortega (1st Team)
Heidi Nestor (2nd Team)
1977 — Ann Meyers (1st Team)
Anita Ortega (1st Team)
ALL-CONFERENCE FRESHMAN TEAM
2023 — Londynn Jones (Coaches)
Londynn Jones (Media)
Kiki Rice (Coaches)
Kiki Rice (Media)
2021 — Emily Bessoir (Coaches)
2020 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
2019 — Lindsey Corsaro (Coaches)
Lindsey Corsaro (Media)
2018 — Michaela Onyenwere (Coaches - 1st Team)
2016 — Kennedy Burke (Coaches - 1st Team)
2015 — Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
2013 — Nirra Fields (Hon. Mention)
Kari Korver (Hon. Mention)
2010 — Markel Walker (1st Team)
2009 — Atonye Nyingifa (1st Team)
2008 — Doreena Campbell (1st Team)
Nina Earl (Hon. Mention)
Darxia Morris (Hon. Mention)
Regina Rogers (Hon. Mention)
2005 — Lindsey Pluimer (1st Team)
2004 — Noelle Quinn (1st Team)
2003 — Nikki Blue (1st Team)
2000 — Nicole Kaczmarski (1st Team)
1999 — Michelle Greco (1st Team)
1998 — LaCresha Flannigan (Hon. Mention)
1997 — Maylana Martin (1st Team)
Carly Funicello (Hon. Mention)
Janae Hubbard (Hon. Mention)
1996 — Erica Gomez (1st Team)
1995 — Tawana Grimes (1st Team)
1993 — Michelle Palmisano (1st Team)
1991 — Natalie Williams (1st Team)
1990 — Nicole Anderson (1st Team)
1989 — Molly Tideback (1st Team)
ALL-CONFERENCE DEFENSIVE TEAM
2025 — Lauren Betts (Coaches, unanimous)
Lauren Betts (Media)
2024 — Lauren Betts (Coaches)
Lauren Betts (Media)
Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
2023 — Lauren Betts (Coaches)
Lauren Betts (Media)
Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
2023 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2022 — Izzy Anstey (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2021 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches)
2020 — Charisma Osborne (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2019 — Kennedy Burke (Coaches)
2018 — Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Coaches - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Media - 1st Team)
Kennedy Burke (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
2017 — Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Coaches - 1st Team)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
Monique Billings (Media - 1st Team)
2016 — Jordin Canada (Coaches - 1st Team)
Nirra Fields (Coaches - Hon. Mention)
Jordin Canada (Media - 1st Team)
2014 — Corinne Costa (Hon. Mention)
2013 — Markel Walker (1st Team)
2011 — Darxia Morris (Hon. Mention)
Jasmine Dixon (Hon. Mention)
2010 — Jasmine Dixon (Hon. Mention)
Markel Walker (Hon. Mention)
2008 — Tierra Henderson (1st Team)
Nina Earl (Hon. Mention)
Darxia Morris (Hon. Mention)
PAC-10/12 ALL-ACADEMIC
2024 — Emily Bessoir
Christeen Iwuala
Gabriela Jaquez
Kiki Rice
Lina Sontag
2023 — Emily Bessoir
Gina Conti
2022 — Emily Bessoir
Camryn Brown
Natalie Chou
Gina Conti
Chantel Horvat
Eliana Sigal
2021 — Camryn Brown
Natalie Chou
Lindsey Corsaro
Chantel Horvat
Brynn Masikewich
Lauryn Miller
Charisma Osborne
Eliana Sigal
2020 — Lindsey Corsaro
Chantel Horvat
Lauryn Miller
2019 — Lindsey Corsaro (Hon. Mention)
Chantel Horvat (Hon. Mention)
Lauryn Miller (Hon. Mention)
Michaela Onyenwere (Hon. Mention)
2018 — Monique Billings (Hon. Mention)
2017 — Kari Korver (1st Team)
Monique Billings (Hon. Mention)
Ashley Hearn (Hon. Mention)
Paulina Hersler (Hon. Mention)
Nicole Kornet (Hon. Mention)
Dominique Williams (Hon. Mention)
2016 — Kari Korver (2nd Team)
Monique Billings (Hon. Mention)
Paulina Hersler (Hon. Mention)
2015 — Kari Korver (2nd Team)
2013 — Mariah Williams (1st Team)
2012 — Rebekah Gardner (Hon. Mention)
Thea Lemberger (Hon. Mention)
Mariah Williams (Hon. Mention)
2011 — Mariah Williams (2nd Team)
Rebekah Gardner (Hon. Mention)
Markel Walker (Hon. Mention)
2010 — Allison Taka (1st Team)
Erica Tukiainen (2nd Team)
Rebekah Gardner (Hon. Mention)
2009 — Allison Taka (1st Team)
Erica Tukiainen (2nd Team)
2009 — Allison Taka (1st Team)
Erica Tukiainen (2nd Team)
2008 — Lindsey Pluimer (1st Team)
Erica Tukiainen (Hon. Mention)
2007 — Lindsey Pluimer(1st Team)
Noelle Quinn (Hon. Mention)
Shaina Zaidi (Hon. Mention)
2006 — Lindsey Pluimer (1st Team)
Lauren Pedersen (Hon. Mention)
Noelle Quinn (Hon. Mention)
2005 — Noelle Quinn (Hon. Mention)
2000 — Maylana Martin (2nd Team)
1996 — Allison Arredondo (2nd Team)
Ricarda Kuypers (2nd Team)
1995 — Ricarda Kuypers (1st Team)
1989 — Michelle Miles (2nd Team)
CONFERENCE ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM
2025 — Lauren Betts (Most Outstanding Player)
2024 — Charisma Osborne
2023 — Emily Bessoir, Charisma Osborne, Kiki Rice
2021 — Michaela Onyenwere
2020 — Michaela Onyenwere
2019 — Kennedy Burke
Japreece Dean
2018 — Jordin Canada
Monique Billings
2017 — Jordin Canada
2016 — Jordin Canada
2013 — Alyssia Brewer
Markel Walker
2011 — Doreena Campbell
Darxia Morris
2010 — Jasmine Dixon
Markel Walker
2009 — Atonye Nyingifa
2007 — Noelle Quinn
2006 — Lisa Willis (MVP)
Noelle Quinn
Nikki Blue
2005 — Nikki Blue
2004 — Nikki Blue
2003 — Nikki Blue
PAC-10/12
2022-23 —
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Charisma Osborne (Nov. 21)
Charisma Osborne (Dec. 5)
2021-22 — Natalie Chou (Dec. 5)
Charisma Osborne (Jan. 24)
Charisma Osborne (Feb. 28)
Jordin Canada (Jan. 29)
2016-17 — Jordin Canada (Nov. 21)
Monique Billings (Jan. 2)
Monique Billings (Feb. 20)
2015-16 — Jordin Canada (Nov. 23)
Nirra Fields (Jan. 4)
2013-14 — Atonye Nyingifa (Nov. 25)
Nirra Fields (Dec. 30)
2012-13 — Markel Walker (Nov. 26)
Alyssia Brewer (Dec. 10); Nirra Fields (Dec. 31)
Atonye Nyingifa (Jan. 14)
2011-12 — Markel Walker (Feb. 6)
2010-11 — Darxia Morris (Nov. 22)
Darxia Morris (Feb. 28)
2009-10 — Jasmine Dixon (Mar. 1)
Markel Walker (Feb. 1)
2008-09 — Doreena Campbell (Jan. 12)
2007-08 — Lindsey Pluimer (Feb. 4)
2005-06 — Lisa Willis (Feb. 27)
Noelle Quinn (Feb. 13);
Noelle Quinn (Jan. 30)
Noelle Quinn (Dec. 5)
Lisa Willis (Nov. 28)
2004-05 — Nikki Blue (Jan. 31)
Noelle Quinn (Dec. 30)
Noelle Quinn (Nov. 22)
Noelle Quinn (Nov. 29)
2003-04 — Noelle Quinn (Feb. 8)
Noelle Quinn (Feb. 15)
2002-03 — Michelle Greco (Jan. 13)
1999-00 — Maylana Martin (Dec. 13)
Maylana Martin (Jan. 24)
Nicole Kaczmarski (Mar. 6)
1998-99 — Maylana Martin (Nov. 30)
LaCresha Flannigan (Jan. 11)
Marie Philman (Feb. 1)
Maylana Martin (Feb. 22)
1997-98 — Melanie Pearson (Dec. 22)
1995-96 — Nickey Hilbert (Jan. 22)
1993-94 — Amy Jalewalia (Dec. 6)
Natalie Williams (Jan. 31)
Natalie Williams (Feb. 7)
Natalie Williams (Feb. 14)
1992-93 — Natalie Williams (Jan. 11)
Natalie Williams (Feb. 22)
1991-92 — Rehema Stephens (Feb. 3)
Natalie Williams (Feb. 10)
Natalie Williams (Mar. 16)
1990-91 — Rehema Stephens (Dec. 10)
Natalie Williams (Jan. 28)
1989-90 — Rehema Stephens (Dec. 11)
Sandra VanEmbricqs (Feb. 5)
1988-89 — Sandra VanEmbricqs (Jan. 23)
1987-88 — Dora Dome (Feb. 9)
1986-87 — Dora Dome (Jan. 12)
PAC-10/12 FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK
2022-23 — Kiki Rice (Dec. 5)
Christeen Iwuala (Dec. 12)
Londynn Jones (Feb. 20)
2019-20 — Charisma Osborne (Feb. 24)
2020-21 —
Charisma Osborne (Nov. 30)
Michaela Onyenwere (Jan. 4)
Natalie Chou (Jan. 11)
Charisma Osborne (Jan. 25)
Charisma Osborne (Mar. 1)
2019-20 —
Michaela Onyenwere (Feb. 10)
2017-18 — Jordin Canada (Nov. 20)
Monique Billings (Jan. 22)
2016-17 — Michaela Onyenwere (Feb. 12)
Michaela Onyenwere (Jan. 15)
2014-15 — Jordin Canada (Dec. 29)
Jordin Canada (Jan. 12)
Jordin Canada (Jan. 19)
Jordin Canada (Mar. 2)
2012-13 — Nirra Fields (Dec. 31)
U.S.A. OLYMPIC TEAM
2000 — Natalie Williams (gold medal)
1984 — Denise Curry (gold medal)
1980 — Denise Curry (boycott)
1976 — Ann Meyers, Coach Billie Moore (silver medal)
INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC TEAMS
2024 — Emily Bessoir, Germany
Angela Dugalic, Serbia Nirra Fields, Canada
Lina Sontag, Germany
2020 — Angela Dugalic, Serbia
2020 — Nirra Fields, Canada
2020 — Atonye Nyingifa, Nigeria
2016 — Nirra Fields, Canada
U.S.A. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM
2002 — Natalie Williams (gold medal)
1998 — Natalie Williams (gold medal)
1983 — Denise Curry (silver medal)
1979 — Denise Curry (gold medal)
Ann Meyers (gold medal)
1975 — Ann Meyers
U.S.A. U23 WOMEN’S NATIONAL TEAM
2017 — Jordin Canada (won Four Nations Tournament) Monique Billings (won Four Nations Tournament)
U.S.A. YOUTH DEVELOPMENT FESTIVAL
2007 — Jasmine Dixon (bronze medal)
2005 — Moniquee Alexander (bronze medal)
2003 — Lindsey Pluimer (bronze medal)
2002 — Noelle Quinn
U.S.A. JUNIOR WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM
1997 — Maylana Martin (gold medal)
U.S.A. JR. WORLD CHAMP. QUALIFYING TEAM
1996 — Maylana Martin
AUSTRALIA - U19 WORLD CUP (BANGKOK)
2019 — Izzy Antsey (silver medal) Gemma Potter (silver medal)
FINLAND - U20 WORLD CUP (LITHUANIA)
2024 — Elina Aarnisalo
GERMANY - U19 WORLD CUP (BANGKOK)
2019 — Emily Bessoir
GERMANY - FIBA WOMEN’S EUROPEAN CHALLENGERS
2021 — Emily Bessoir (U20)
Lina Sontag (U18)
GERMANY - FIBA WOMEN’S EUROBASKET
2023 — Emily Bessoir
Lina Sontag
GERMANY - FIBA U20 WOMEN’S EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP (DIV. B)
2023 — Lina Sontag
CROATIA - FIBA 1U8 WOMEN’S EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP (DIV. B)
2025 — Lena Bilic
BRUINS ON NATIONAL TEAMS
U.S.A. - FIBA U19 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL WORLD CUP
2025 — Sienna Betts (gold medal)
2023 — Londynn Jones (gold medal)
Kiki Rice (gold medal)
FIBA WOMEN’S AMERICUP
2025 — Gianna Kneepkens (U.S.A., gold medal)
Gabriela Jaquez (Mexico)
2023 — Lauren Betts (U.S.A., silver medal)
Charisma Osborne (U.S.A., silver medal)
Nirra Fields (Canada, bronze medal)
U.S.A. FIBA AMERICAS U18 CHAMPIONSHIP
2022 — Kiki Rice (gold medal)
Londynn Jones (gold medal)
2014 — Recee’ Caldwell (gold medal)
U.S.A. FIBA 3X3 U18 WORLD CUP
2021 — Kiki Rice (gold medal)
U.S.A. WOMEN’S U16 NATIONAL TEAM
2019 — Kiki Rice (gold medal)
Londynn Jones (gold medal)
U.S.A. WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES TEAM
2015 — Jordin Canada (gold medal)
2005 — Lisa Willis (gold medal)
1981 — Denise Curry (silver medal)
1977 — Ann Meyers (silver medal)
U.S.A. JONES CUP TEAM
1998 — Erica Gomez (gold medal)
1996 — Natalie Williams (gold medal)
1991 — Rehema Stephens (bronze medal)
Nicole Anderson (bronze medal)
1984 — Denise Curry (gold medal)
1979 — Denise Curry (gold medal)
Ann Meyers (gold medal)
U.S.A. PAN AMERICAN GAMES TEAM
2019 — Michaela Onyenwere (silver medal)
1983 — Denise Curry (gold medal)
1979 — Denise Curry (silver medal) Ann Meyers (silver medal)
1975 — Ann Meyers (gold medal)
U.S.A. OLYMPIC FESTIVAL TEAMS
1991 — Kellie Bennett (bronze medal)
1990 — Nicole Young (silver medal)
1989 — Molly Tideback
Rehema Stephens
1987 — Rehema Stephens (gold medal)
Sheri Bouldin (bronze medal)
1986 — Dora Dome (bronze medal)
1985 — Dora Dome
Shari Biggs
1983 — Shari Biggs (silver medal)
Michelle McCoy (silver medal)
Dorice McFadden (silver medal)
1982 — Angel Hardy
Char Jones (silver medal)
Dorice McFadden (silver medal)
1981 — Necie Thompson
Mary Hegarty
Michelle McCoy
1979 — Kendee Eulert (bronze medal)
Vera James (bronze medal)
1978 — Melanie Horn (bronze medal)
Kendee Eulert
Vera James
Beverly Groot
Kiki Rice - 2023 FIBA U19 Women’s Basketball World Cup (courtesy of FIBA)
Nirra Fields and Charisma Osborne - 2023 FIBA Women’s AmeriCup (courtesy of FIBA)
Lauren Betts - 2023 FIBA Women’s AmeriCup (courtesy of FIBA)
BRUINS IN THE WNBA
Monique Billings
Atlanta Dream (2018-24)
Dallas Wings (2024)
Phoenix Mercury (2024)
Golden State Valkyries (2025)
Nikki Blue
Washington Mystics (2006-09)
New York Liberty (2010)
Phoenix Mercury - Asst. Coach (202223), Interim Head Coach (2023)
Kennedy Burke
Indiana Fever (2019-20)
Seattle Storm (2021)
Washington Mystics (2022)
New York Libery (2024- )
Jordin Canada
Seattle Storm (2018-2021)
Los Angeles Sparks (2022-23)
Atlanta Dream (2024- )
Japreece Dean
Chicago Sky (2020)
Nirra Fields
Phoenix Mercury (2016)
Rebekah Gardner
Chicago Sky (2022-24)
New York Liberty (2024- )
Michelle Greco
Seattle Storm (2004)
Maylana Martin
Charlotte Sting (2002)
Minnesota Lynx (2000-01)
Darxia Morris
Los Angeles Sparks (2014)
Atlanta Dream (2017)
Michaela Onyenwere
New York Liberty (2021-2022)
Phoenix Mercury (2023)
Chicago Sky (2024- )
Charisma Osborne
Phoenix Mercury (2024)
Noelle Quinn
Minnesota Lynx (2007-08)
Los Angeles Sparks (2009-11)
Washington Mystics (2012)
Seattle Storm (2013-14)
Phoenix Mercury (2015-16)
Seattle Storm (2016-18)
Rehema Stephens
Sacramento Monarchs (1998)
Sandra VanEmbricqs
Los Angeles Sparks (1998)
Natalie Williams
Indiana Fever (2003-05)
Utah Starzz (1999-2002)
Lisa Willis
Los Angeles Sparks (2006-07) New York Liberty (2007-08)
BRUINS IN THE WNBA DRAFT
Charisma Osborne
Phoenix Mercury (2024/3rd Rd./25th pick)
Michaela Onyenwere
New York Liberty (2021/1st Rd. /6th pick)
Japreece Dean
Chicago Sky (2020/3rd Rd. /30th pick)
Jordin Canada
Seattle Storm (2018/1st Rd. /5th pick)
Monique Billings
Atlanta Dream (2018/2nd Rd. /15th pick)
Kennedy Burke
Dallas Wings (2019/2nd Rd. /22nd pick)
Japreece Dean
Chicago Sky (2020/3rd Rd. /30th pick)
Onyenwere
Nirra Fields
Phoenix Mercury (2016/3rd Rd. /32nd pick)
Lindsey Pluimer
Washington Mystics (2008/2nd Rd. /20th pick)
Noelle Quinn
Minnesota Lynx (2007/1st Rd. /4th pick)
Lisa Willis
Los Angeles Sparks (2006/1st Rd. /5th pick)
Nikki Blue
WNBA CHAMPIONS
Kennedy Burke
New York Liberty (2024)
Jordin Canada
Seattle Storm (2018, 20)
Nikki Fargas (Caldwell)
Las Vegas Aces (2022, 23, 25 - as President)
Michelle Greco
Seattle Storm (2004)
Washington Mystics (2006/2nd Rd. /19th pick)
Nicole Kaczmarski
New York Liberty (2003/3rd Rd. /39th pick)
Maylana Martin
Minnesota Lynx (2000/1st Rd. /10th pick)
Natalie Williams
Utah Starzz (1999/1st Rd. /3rd pick)
Rehema Stephens
Los Angeles Sparks (1998/3rd Rd. /25th pick)
Natalie Nakase
Las Vegas Aces (2022-23 - as Asst. Coach)
Noelle Quinn
Seattle Storm (2018)
Seattle Storm (2020 - as Ast. Coach)
Natalie Williams
Las Vegas Aces (2022-23 - as GM)
HEAD COACHES
Noelle Quinn
Seattle Storm (2021-25)
Natalie Nakase
Golden State Valkyries (2025- )
Nikki Blue (2006-2010) Lisa Willis (2006-2008) Natalie Williams (1999-05)
H. Petah Tikva, Israel (2023-Present) London Lions, England (2022-2023)
Chantel Horvat
Townsville Fire, WNBL (2025-present)
Emlak, Turkey (2023-24)
Gorzow Wielkopolski, Poland (2022-2023)
Janae Hubbard
Team Apollon, Greece (2001-2002)
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
Richmond Rage, ABL (1996)
BRUINS IN THE PROS
Thea Lemberger
Royal Eagles, Holland (2016-17)
Orduspor, Turkey (2015-16)
Elitzur Maclaren Holon, Israel (2014-15)
Amanda Livingston
BC Pharmaserv Marburg, Germany (2008)
Luiana Livulo
Campus Promete Logrono, Spain (2017-18)
Sport Lisboa Benfica, Portugal (2016-17)
Osnabruck, Germany (2015-16)
Ann Meyers
Houston Angels, WBL (1978) - #1 draft pick
New Jersey Gems, WBL (1979-80) - League MVP
Natalie Nakase
San Jose Spiders, NWBL (2005)
San Diego Siege, NWBL (2006)
Heidi Nestor
Milwaukee Does, WBL (1979-80)
San Francisco Pioneers, WBL (1980-81)
New Orleans Pride, WBL (1980-81)
Atonye Nyingifa
Fuerza Regia, Mexico (2023-Present)
Hertzliya, Israel (2022-23)
Antalya 07, Turkey (2022)
Clarinos San Cristobal, Spain (2021-22)
Estudiantes, Spain (2020-21)
Hapoel Rishon Le-Zion, Israel (2017-18)
Atenienses De Manati, Puerto Rico (2016-17)
Elitzur Maclaren Holon, Israel (2015-17)
Hapoel Petah Tikva, Israel (2014-15)
Michaela Onyenwere
Ormanspor (2023-Present)
Spar Girona, Spain (2021-22)
Anita Ortega
San Francisco Pioneers, WBL (1979-80, 80-81)
Minnesota Fillies, WBL (1980-81)
Jaelynn Penn
Hatillo, Puerto Rico (2023-Present)
Lindsey Pluimer
Sydney Uni Flames, Australia (2008)
Rehema Stephens
Sporting Athens, Greece (1998)
Richmond Rage, ABL (1997)
IImar’I Thomas
M. Ramat Gan, Israel (2025-Present)
Torpan Pojat, Finland (2022-24)
Sandra VanEmbricqs
CJM Bourges Basket, France (1998)
Soubry Kortrijk, Belgium (1996)
BCSS Namur, Belgium (1995)
Texim Tonego, Netherlands (1994)
Markel Walker
Elitzur Ramla, Israel (2017-18)
Elitzur Maclaren Holon, Israel (2016-17)
Ponce, Puerto Rico (2014-15)
Natalie Williams
Portland Power, ABL (1997-99), League MVP ‘98
Shaina Zaidi
Wolfenbuttel Wildcats, Germany (2007)
Atonye Nyingifa, Nigeria Capture Second-Straight FIBA AfroBasket Title
UCLA Bruin Atonye Nyingifa (2008-09, 2010-14) and the Nigeria Women’s National Team won their second-consecutive FIBA AfroBasket title in 2019, taking down Senegal 60-55 in front of over 15,000 fans at Dakar Arena. During the five-game championship run, Nyingifa averaged 6.2 points per game, scoring in double figures twice. During the Group Phase, she scored 12 points on 4-for-5 shooting to go along with four rebounds against Tunisia. She gave Nigeria a big lift in the semifinals, scoring 10 points and nailing a trio of 3-pointers to help seal a 79-58 triumph over Mali. In the finals, Nigeria led Senegal at the break, 32-24, before they found themselves tied at 54 apiece. But in the final 2:24, Nigeria scored six of the game’s last seven points to seal the 60-55 win.
From left: Ann Meyers, Nirra Fields and Noelle Quinn with the Phoenix Mercury at the start of the 2016 WNBA season.
Denise Curry — No. 12, Forward, Davis, CA (Davis HS)
Charisma Osborne — No. 20, Guard, Moreno Valley, CA (Windward School)
Jordin Canada — No. 3, Guard, Los Angeles, CA (Windward School)
Maylana Martin — No. 13, Forward, Perris, CA (Perris HS)
Darxia Morris — No. 3, Guard, Pasadena, CA (Muir HS)
Lauren
Betts — No. 51, Center, Centennial, CO (Grandview HS / Stanford)
Kari Korver — No.
2, Guard, Paramount, CA (Valley Christian HS)
Rebekah Gardner — No. 35, Guard, Upland, CA (Ayala HS)
Japreece Dean — No. 24, Guard, Austin, TX (Vista Ridge HS) Years
Jaime Brown — No. 20, Guard, Carson City, NV (Carson City HS)
1,000-POINT CLUB
Nicole Anderson — No. 23, Guard, La Jolla, CA (La Jolla HS) Years
Jasmine Dixon — No. 33, Forward, Long Beach, CA (Long Beach Poly HS) Years
Thea Lemberger — No. 1, Guard, Santa Monica, CA (Santa Monica HS)
Londynn Jones — No. 3, Guard, Riverside, CA (Centennial HS)
Marie Philman — No. 5, Forward, Huntington Beach, CA (Edison HS)
Ann Meyers 1975-78 Guard
Considered the pioneer of collegiate women’s basketball, Ann Meyers was the first female athlete ever to earn a four-year scholarship to UCLA, and she finished her collegiate career as the first four-time All-American in her sport.
In her senior season (1978), she led UCLA to the AIAW national championship, won the Broderick Award as the women’s basketball player of the year and went on to win the prestigious Broderick Cup as the Collegiate Female Athlete of the Year in any sport. Also that year, she became the only player in UCLA history to record a quadruple-double, recording 20 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists and 10 steals in a game against Stephen F. Austin.
For almost two decades, Meyers held the school record for assists in a game (15) and was the school leader in career assists (544) until the marks were broken in 1999. She remains the school leader in steals (403) and blocked shots (101-tied) and is ninth in scoring (1685).
Meyers, who won a silver medal as a member of the 1976 U.S. Olympic team, has been inducted into the Naismith, FIBA and Women’s Basketball Halls of Fame. In 1988, her first year of eligibility, she was the first woman inducted into UCLA’s Hall of Fame, and two years later, she had her uniform #15 retired.
The widow of the late Major League Baseball Hall of Famer Don Drysdale, she has worked for years as a radio/television broadcaster (called the action at the 2008 Olympic Games). In the summer of 2006, she was named the general manager of the WNBA’s Phoenix franchise, which has won the 2007, 2009 and 2014 WNBA Championships.
Anita Ortega 1976-79 Guard
After scoring a game-high 23 points in the 1978 national championship game against Maryland, Anita Ortega forever etched her name in Bruin lore as she led UCLA to the AIAW title.
Ortega, who also led the Bruins to the 1979 Final Four, still ranks seventh in career scoring with 1751 points and is in the Top 20 in rebounding with 559 rebounds. She is also listed amongst the Bruin leaders in all-time scoring average (16.1), field goals made (705), steals (240) and doubledigit scoring games (91). Ortega, a four-year starter, was a three-time first-team all-conference performer (1977-79).
Following her career at UCLA, she went on to earn All-Pro honors in the Women’s Professional Basketball League. She later served as an assistant coach for the Bruins from 1981-83 and was inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame in 2002.
Ortega retired as a captain in the Los Angeles Police Department in June of 2016. She was one of only two female African-Americans who have ever held the rank of captain in the LAPD. She also remains involved in women’s basketball as a Division I college basketball official.
The consistent Denise Curry, a three-time All-American, set a collegiate record by scoring in double figures in all 130 games she played for the Bruins.
The Davis, CA native set 14 school records in her career at Westwood and still ranks No. 1 in career scoring (3,198) and rebounding (1,310) in addition to eight other categories. She played in two Final Fours and helped lead UCLA to the 1978 AIAW National Championship as a freshman. From 1977-81, Curry’s teams won 98 games, including a school-record 29 during her senior season.
Curry won a gold medal at the 1984 Olympic Games, four years after being selected to the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team that did not compete due to the U.S. boycott. Curry went on to play professional ball in Europe for several seasons.
In 1990, UCLA retired her uniform number (#12), and she was inducted into the UCLA Hall of Fame in 1994 and into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1997.
Curry was an assistant coach with the San Jose franchise of the American Basketball League in 1996-97 and then went on to serve as the head coach at Cal State Fullerton from 1998-2000. She has also worked an assistant coach at Long Beach State, working on the staff of fellow Bruin alum Mary Hegarty.
Rehema Stephens
1989-92 • Guard
Rehema Stephens, a third-team All-American as a senior and a three-time All-Pac-10 selection (1990-92), finished her career ranked second at UCLA in career points (1,887), second in scoring average (21.7) and eighth in career rebounds (643).
She twice led the Pac-10 in scoring (1990 - 20.1 average; 1991 - 25.3 average) and helped the Bruins reach the NCAA Tournament in two (1990 and 1992) of her three seasons. The 1992 squad advanced to the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament and finished the season ranked 18th in the USA Today poll. Her 34-point effort against Oregon in a 1991 game is the most points ever scored by a Bruin in a game played in the Wooden Center. Stephens’ 25.3 points-per-game mark in the 1991 season still ranks as the third-best in UCLA history.
Stephens earned a bronze medal while representing the United States as a member of its 1991 Jones Cup team. In 1987, she took home gold in the USA Olympic Sports Festival. Stephens was selected by the Richmond franchise in the 1996 American Basketball League draft and went on to play with the Sacramento Monarchs of the WNBA in 1998.
Natalie Williams
1990-94 • Forward
Natalie Williams, a 2004 UCLA Hall of Fame inductee, dominated the backboards like no other player. Her career average of 12.8 rebounds is more than 2.5 rebounds higher than any other Bruin and ranked first in Pac-10 Conference history until 2016 when Oregon’s Jillian Alleyne surpassed her mark.
She led the Pac-10 in rebounding three times (the three highest averages in league history at the time) and twice led the Pac-10 in scoring. She held the Pac-10 records for career rebound average and single-game rebounds. At UCLA, she ranks No. 5 in scoring (1,813) and No. 3 in scoring average (20.4).
Williams, a two-time first-team All-American, was selected to the 1994 Kodak All-America team and was named Pac-10 Player of the Year as a senior.
She was also an All-American in volleyball, earning National Player of the Year honors twice. She accumulated a total of 16 Pac-10 Player of the Week honors (eight in each sport), and in February of 1996, she was selected the Pac-10 Female Athlete of the Decade (1987-96).
Professionally, she enjoyed an MVP season in 1997-98 with Portland of the ABL, leading the league in both scoring and rebounding for a second-straight season. In 1999, she ranked first in the WNBA in rebounding and fourth in scoring. In the summer of 2000, she helped the U.S. win the gold medal at the Olympic Games. She retired from professional basketball at the end of the 2005 season.
Maylana Martin
1997-2000 • Forward
Maylana Martin led the Bruins to 77 wins in her career which saw her help take UCLA to its only Pac-10 championship, the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament in 1999 and a schoolbest three-straight NCAA tournaments overall. She became just the third player ever selected first-team All-Pac-10 in all four seasons and was chosen the 1997 Pac-10 Freshman of the Year and the 1999 Pac-10 Player of the Year. Martin earned first-team Kodak All-America honors in 1999 after leading the Bruins to the Pac-10 Championship and to 26 victories.
Martin is one of only two Bruins to have surpassed the 2,000-point barrier, and she still ranks in the school’s all-time top-five in 11 categories. She ended her collegiate career ranked eighth on the all-time conference rebound list with 935 boards and sixth on the all-time conference scoring list with 2,101 points.
The No. 10 overall selection in the 2000 WNBA Draft, Martin played two seasons with the Minnesota Lynx and also played with the Charlotte Sting. She was an assistant coach at the University of Portland before returning to UCLA as an assistant in the summer of 2004. As a Bruin coach (2004-08), she helped lead UCLA to its first Pac-10 Tournament title in the 2006 season. After her playing career, she moved into coaching and was an assistant coach at Portland, UCLA and Pepperdine.
Martin now serves as a basketball commentator for Pac-12 Networks.
Michelle Greco 1999-2003 • Guard
Michelle Greco, a finalist for the State Farm Wade Trophy as a senior, helped the Bruins win 71 games in her career and their first Pac-10 Conference title. She also played a large role in UCLA’s run to the Elite Eight in 1999 after being thrust into the starting point guard role in the West Regionals as a true freshman. Her play in the regional earned her All-NCAA West Regional honors.
Greco led the Pac-10 in scoring twice during her career (2001-19.9, 2003-18.9) and was selected first-team all-conference in 2001 and 2003. She also led the Pac-10 in free throw percentage in 2001 (.865) and in steals in 2003 (2.8). With 1,707 total points, she finished her career ranked sixth on the school scoring list. In addition, she concluded her career ranked amongst the Top 10 in 10 other statistical categories.
In her rookie season in the WNBA in 2004, she won a WNBA title with the Seattle Storm.
Nikki Blue
2003-06 • Guard
One of the Pac-10’s all-time great point guards, Nikki Blue became just the fifth player in conference history to be named to the All-Conference team four straight years.
She finished her career ranked fifth on the all-time UCLA list in scoring (1,797), second in assists (602), third in steals (325), fourth in made three-point shots (114), seventh in three-point shooting percentage (.355) and second in career made free throws (455).
Blue, a two-time honorable mention All-American and four-time Pac-10 All-Tournament selection, produced 89 double-figure scoring games for her career. Her 189 assists were the most ever by a Bruin senior, and she became the first Bruin to lead the Pac-10 in assists. Blue wound up her UCLA career ranked second on the Pac-10 career list for steals, eighth in assists and 18th in scoring. In 2006, she helped to lead the Bruins to their first Pac-10 Conference Tournament title.
She was selected in the second round of the 2006 WNBA draft by the Washington Mystics and now serves as an Assistant Coach for Arizona State.
Lisa Willis
2003-06 • Guard
The best three-point shooter in UCLA history, Lisa Willis finished her career as the school’s all-time leader in three-point shots made with 256 and the Pac-10’s all-time leader in career steals with 368.
She also left UCLA ranked ninth on the school scoring list (1,677), fifth on the games played list (120), 13th on the rebounding list (625) and eighth on the free throw percentage list (76%). Her total of 87 double-digit scoring games ranked sixth at UCLA.
She finished her career ranked first on the all-time Pac-10 steals list, second on the conference made three-point shot list and 21st in scoring. Willis was the Pac-10 leader in steals in her last three seasons and was the first player in UCLA history to record three-straight seasons with 100 or more steals. Willis was a two-time first-team all-conference selection and was named Most Valuable Player of the 2006 Pac-10 Tournament and an honorable mention All-American in 2006.
Willis was selected with the fifth pick in the first round of the 2006 WNBA draft by the Los Angeles Sparks and also went on to play with the New York Liberty.
Noelle Quinn
2004-07 • Guard
Noelle Quinn achieved something no other Bruin basketball player, male or female, has ever done - total at least 1,700 points, 700 rebounds and 400 assists for a career. She concluded her career just short of becoming only the second player in Pac-10 history to have reached 1,800 points, 800 rebounds and 400 assists.
Quinn finished her career ranked in the school’s top 10 in 14 different categories, including points (4th), rebounds (8th) and assists (7th). She earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors as a freshman, junior and senior and earned Pac10 All-Tournament honors in 2006 and 2007. Quinn was the leading scorer for the Bruins in the championship game at the 2006 Pac-10 Tournament, scoring the game-tying basket with five seconds remaining to force overtime in the eventual Bruin victory over Stanford. She was honored a Pac-10 record eight times in her career as the conference Player of the Week and was a two-time honorable mention All-American.
Quinn was selected by the Minnesota Lynx with the fourth pick of the first round of the 2007 WNBA draft. She played professionally in the WNBA and overseas from 2007-18 and won a WNBA title with the Seattle Storm in 2018. She then transitioned into coaching and recently helped guide the Storm to the 2020 WNBA title as Associate Head Coach. She was named Head Coach of the Storm during the 2021 season and recently received a multi-year contract extension.
Lindsey Pluimer
2005-08 • Forward
Lindsey Pluimer, a fixture in the Bruin starting lineup from day one, became the first UCLA player in the NCAA era to earn a start in every game of her career, 123 games, third-most in school history.
After those 123 games, she became one of just five Bruin players ever to record career totals of 1,500 points, 700 rebounds and 75 blocks. She completed her career ranked 12th on UCLA’s career scoring list with 1,558 points, 10th in rebounds with 737, sixth in blocked shots with 93 and seventh in 3-point field goals made (84).
In her senior season, Pluimer led the team in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and three-pointers and ranked in the Pac-10's Top 10 in six of 13 individual categories, including sixth in scoring (14.1) and tied for eighth in rebounding (6.5).
A three-time Academic All-District VIII and two-time first-team Pac-10 All-Academic selection, Pluimer was named the 2007-08 Toyo Tires Pac-10 Scholar Athlete of the Year for women's basketball.
She was the second round selection (No. 20 overall) of the Washington Mystics in the 2008 WNBA draft. After her professional basketball career came to a close, she founded “With My Own Two Hands”, a non-profit that helps raise funds for water and greenhouses in Kenya.
UCLA Honors 15 Greatest Players and 1978 National Championship Team
UCLA women’s basketball’s past and present merged February 21, 1998, when UCLA honored its 15 greatest players of all-time at halftime of the UCLA-USC game. It was an all-around day of celebration for the UCLA program, as the current team defeated USC, 87-73, to complete a season sweep against its cross-town rival in front of what was then a Pauley Pavilion regular season record crowd of 7,258. The 1978 team was also honored on the 20th anniversary of UCLA’s first national title in women’s basketball.
The list of 15 included two Naismith Basketball Hall of Famers (Denise Curry and Ann Meyers), the Pac-10 Conference Female Athlete of the Decade (Natalie Williams) and a winner of six Olympic medals (Jackie Joyner).
These 15 greatest players were selected by a committee that included current UCLA coaches, former UCLA players and coaches and current and former UCLA administrators. The number 15 was chosen to mirror the amount of scholarships available in the sport of women’s basketball.
UCLA
Women’s Basketball’s 15 Greatest Players (alphabetical order, as selected 2/21/98):
UCLA’s 15 Greatest Players. Top row (l-r): Dora Dome, Denise Curry, Necie Thompson, Sheila Adams, Natalie Williams, Ann Meyers, Althea Ford (for Sandra VanEmbricqs). Bottom row (l-r): Mary Hegarty, Anne Dean, Nicole Anderson, Dianne Frierson.
UCLA Olympians (l-r) Denise Curry (1980, 1984), coach Billie Moore (1976), Ann Meyers (1976) and Natalie Williams (2000)
UCLA’s 1978 National Championship Team. Top row, (l-r): Head coach Billie Moore, Heidi Nestor, Denise Corlett, Denise Curry, Tam Breckenridge, Ann Meyers. Bottom row (l-r): Sports Information Director Michael Sondheimer, Beth Moore, Dianne Frierson, Debbie Willie, assistant coach Colleen Matsuhara, Yvette Duran.
On Feb. 3, 1990, four of the greatest players in UCLA basketball history — Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Lew Alcindor), Bill Walton, Ann Meyers and Denise Curry — had their uniform numbers retired. This special ceremony was the key moment in 1989-90’s “Pauley at 25” celebration and marked the first time that any Bruin basketball numbers had been retired. All four players earned consensus first-team All-America honors three times, the criteria used for deciding which of UCLA’s many outstanding players should have their numbers retired. The quartet are also in the National Basketball Hall of Fame, the Naismith Hall of Fame and the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame.
#12 Denise Curry
The consistent Curry, a three-time AllAmerican, set a collegiate record by scoring in double figures in each of the 130 games in which she played for the Bruins. The Davis, CA native set 14 school records in her career at Westwood and still ranks first in 10 career categories. In 1997, she was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA. Prior to her gold medal-winning performance on the 1984 U.S. Olympic team, she had previously been selected to the 1980 team. Curry played professionally in Europe for several seasons and served as an assistant women’s basketball coach at California. She became the head coach at Cal State Fullerton after working as an assistant with the San Jose franchise of the American Basketball League. Curry has also served as an assistant basketball coach at Long Beach State.
#15 Ann Meyers
Meyers, who was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in May of 1993, was the first woman to earn a full scholarship at UCLA and went on to become the first four-time women’s basketball All-American. In 1978, she was named College Player of the Year and winner of the prestigious Broderick Cup after helping to lead the Bruins to the national championship. Meyers is still the school leader in steals (403) and blocked shots (101-tied) along with being the only player in UCLA history to have posted a quadruple-double with 20 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists and 10 steals in a game vs. S.F. Austin in 1978. In addition, she earned a silver medal as a member of the 1976 U.S. Olympic Team, which was coached by former UCLA mentor Billie Moore. She has worked extensively as a television commentator for men’s and women’s college and professional basketball. She is currently the general manager for the WNBA’s Phoenix franchise, which captured the 2007, 2009 and 2014 championships.
Billie Moore
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame inductee Billie Moore was the first coach to lead two schools to national women’s basketball championships - Cal State Fullerton and UCLA.
In 1970, her very first season at Cal State Fullerton, Moore led her team to the AIAW national title, and in her second season at UCLA in 1978, she guided the Bruins to their first and only national championship.
Moore was UCLA head coach for 16 years (1977-93) and compiled a 296-181 (.621) record. Along with the AIAW Championship, she led her team to a fourth-place finish in 1979, and her Bruin teams finished ninth nationally in 1985 and 1992.
At Cal State Fullerton, she recorded a 140-15 record in eight seasons, and her overall coaching record at both schools was 436-196 over 24 years. Her UCLA and Cal State Fullerton teams won 10 conference championships and advanced to the post-season 16 times with a 59-18 record. Moore, who coached fellow Hall of Famers Ann Meyers and Denise Curry, became the eighth coach in women’s basketball history to reach the 400-win mark.
Moore coached the first U.S. women’s Olympic basketball team to a silver medal at the Olympic Games in Montreal in 1976. She also led the 1973 and 1975 entries to the World University Games and the 1975 U.S. Pan American Games team.
Many of Coach Moore’s former players (Ann Meyers, Denise Curry, Anita Ortega and Pat Summitt) have gone on to excel in athletic endeavors including college coaching, professional basketball, radio/television broadcasting and community service. Pat Summitt has been quoted as saying, “Billie Moore has had more influence on my coaching career than anyone. She was my mentor. She’s had a huge impact on my coaching style.”
Moore is a Westmoreland, Kansas native who received her undergraduate degree from Washburn University in Kansas and earned her Master’s degree from Southern Illinois University. In 1999, she received her Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Washburn University.
Hall of Fame coach Billie Moore
Childs,
INDIVIDUAL CAREER STATISTICS - 1975-PRESENT
INDIVIDUAL CAREER STATISTICS - 1975-PRESENT
Detra Lockhart
Tawana Grimes Markel Walker
2024-25
Record: 34-3; 15-2 Big Ten, 2nd Head Coach: Cori Close
Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 5/6
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N4 5/6 vs. Louisville (17/17) 1 W, 66-59
N10 5/6 Colgate W,81-63
N12 5/6 Pepperdine W, 91-54
N17 5/6 Arkansas W, 101-52
N24 5/6 South Carolina (1/1) W, 77-62
N29 1/2 vs. UT-Martin 2 W, 97-37
N30 1/2 vs. Fresno State 2 W, 97-41
D1 1/2 @ Hawai’i 2 W, 70-49
D8 1/1 @ Washington W, 73-62
D14 1/1 @ Long Beach State W, 102-51
D16 1/1 Cal Poly W, 69-37
D20 1/1 vs. Creighton 3 W, 70-41
D29 1/1 Nebraska (RV/RV)* W, 91-54
J1 1/1 Michigan (24/RV)* W, 86-70
J4 1/1 @ Indiana* W, 73-62
J7 1/1 @ Purdue* W, 83-49
J12 1/1 Northwestern* W, FORFEIT
(Considered a “No Contest,” per NCAA rules, and a W in B1G)
J15 1/1 Penn State*^ W, 83-67
J20 1/1 vs. Baylor (25/23) 4 W, 72-57
J23 1/1 @ Rutgers* W, 84-66
J26 1/1 @ Maryland (8/10)* W, 82-67
F2 1/1 Minnesota (RV/RV)* W, 79-53
F5 1/1 Ohio State (8/8)* W, 65-52
F9 1/1 @ Oregon* W, 62-52
F13 1/1 @USC (6/6)* L, 71-60
F16 1/1 Michigan State (22/22)* W, 75-69
F20 3/3 Illinois (25/RV)* W, 70-55
F23 3/3 @ Iowa* W, 67-65
F26 2/2 @ Wisconsin* W, 91-61
M1 2/2 USC (4/3)* L, 80-67
M7 4/4 vs. No. 10 Nebraska+ W, 85-74
M8 4/4 vs. No. 3 Ohio State + W, 75-46
M9 4/4 vs. No. 1 USC (2/2) + W, 72-67
NCAA 1st and 2nd Rounds - Los Angeles, Calif. (Pauley Pavilion)
M21 1/1 No. 16 Southern** W, 84-46
M23 1/1 No. 8 Richmond W, 84-67
NCAA Spokane 1 Region - Spokane, Wash. (Spokane Arena)
1Battle 4 Atlantis in Paradise Islands, The Bahamas. *Pac-12 Tournament in Las Vegas **NCAA Tournament
2021-22
Record: 18-13; 8-8 Pac-12, 7th Head Coach: Cori Close
Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 20/14
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N10 (20/14) Pepperdine W, 78-69
N18 (20/14) CSUN W, 73-46
N21 (20/14) Virginia W, 69-57
N26 (19/15) Kent State1 L, 69-75
N27 (19/15) South Dakota State1 L, 66-76
N28 (19/15) St. John’s1 W, 73-65
D5 (RV/24) San Jose State W, 112-33
D11 (RV/25) UConn 2 (3/2) L, 61-71
D16 Texas Southern Canceled
D19 Ohio State Canceled
D21 CSU Bakersfield Canceled
D31 Arizona State Postponed
J7 @ Utah Postponed
J9 @ Colorado L, 63-71
J14 Washington W, 63-48
J16 Washington State W, 71-58
J20 USC W, 66-43
J23 @ USC W, 68-58
J26 Arizona (8/8) L, 63-74
J28 @ Oregon L, Forfeit
J30 @ Oregon State L, 58-72
F2 Stanford L, 48-76
F6 California W, 59-54
F11 @ Washington State L, 65-66
F13 @ Washington W, 69-61
F16 @ Oregon L, 53-67
F18 Colorado L, 54-67
F20 Utah L, 70-75
F24 @ Arizona W, 64-46
F26 @ Arizona State W, 59-52
M2 USC* W, 73-60
M3 Oregon* L, 60-63
M18 UC Irvine** W, 61-48
M20 Air Force** W, 61-45
M24 @ Wyoming** W, 82-81 (3OT)
M27 @ Oregon State** W, 74-66
M31 @ South Dakota State** L, 59-62
1 Gulf Coast Showcase in Estero, Fla.
2 Never Forget Classic in Newark, N.J.
*Pac-12 Tournament in Las Vegas **WNIT
2020-21
Record: 17-6; 12-4 Pac-12, 3rd Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: N/A/12th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 9th/10th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N25 (9/10) CAL STATE FULLERTON W, 98-59
N29 (9/10) @ Pepperdine Canceled
D4 (9/no poll) @ Arizona (7) L, 65-68
D6 (9/no poll) @ Arizona State W, 63-59
D9 (11/11) UCSB W, 102-45
D13 (11/11) @ USC W, 73-52
D19 (11/11) CALIFORNIA W, 71-37
D21 (11/11) STANFORD (1) L, 49-61
J1 (11/12) @ Oregon State Canceled
J3 (11/12) @ Oregon (8) W, 73-71
J8 (9/9) COLORADO Canceled
J10 (9/9) UTAH W, 92-67
J15 (8/8) WASHINGTON Canceled
J17 (8/8) WASHINGTON STATE (25) W (OT), 68-66
J22 (6/6) vs. Stanford (5) (@Santa Cruz) W, 70-66
J24 (6/6) @ California Canceled
J29 (5/5) ARIZONA STATE W, 60-57
J31 (5/5) ARIZONA Canceled
F5 (5/4) @ Washington State L, 63-67
F7 (5/4) @ Washington W, 84-50
F12 (8/7) @ Utah W, 69-58
F14 (8/7) @ Colorado Canceled
F19 (8/9) OREGON (13) W, 83-56
F21 (8/9) OREGON STATE L, 64-71
F28 (10/10) USC W, 93-51
M4 (9/9) vs. Washington* W, 58-46
M5 (9/9) vs. Arizona* W, 58-49
M7 (9/9) vs. Stanford* L, 55-75
M22 (9/9) vs. Wyoming** (@ Austin) W, 69-48
M24 (9/9) vs. Texas** (@ San Antonio) L, 62-71
*Pac-12 Tournament in Las Vegas
**NCAA Tournament
2019-20
Record: 26-5; 14-4 Pac-12, 2nd
Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 10th/9th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 11th/11th
**The 2020 NCAA Tournament was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N5 (11/11) WEBER STATE W, 85-45
N9 (11/--) LOYOLA MARYMOUNT W, 74-52
N14 (11/--) LONG BEACH STATE W, 86-51
N22 (11/11) NORTHERN COLORADO W, 92-58
N26 (11/11) YALE W, 100-65
N30 (11/11) vs. UCF (@ Charlottesville) W, 61-56
D1 (11/11) @ Virginia W, 73-62
D7 (11/11) @ CSUN W, 58-44
D15 (10/10) PACIFIC W, 68-57
D19 (10/10) @ Georgia W, 59-50
D22 (10/10) @ Indiana (12) W, 68-58
D29 (10/10) USC W, 83-59
J3 (10/10) ARIZONA STATE W, 68-66
J5 (10/10) ARIZONA (18) W, 70-58
J10 (8/9) @ Utah W, 84-54
J12 (8/9) @ Colorado W, 65-62
J17 (7/8) @ USC L (2OT), 68-20
J24 (10/10) WASHINGTON W (OT), 85-80
J26 (10/10) WASHINGTON STATE W, 66-50
J31 (8/9) @ Arizona (16) L, 66-92
F2 (8/9) @ Arizona State (19) W, 70-61
F7 (10/10) @ Stanford (6) W, 79-69
F9 (10/10) @ California W (OT), 74-70
F14 (7/8) OREGON (3) L, 66-80
F17 (8/7) OREGON STATE (15) W (OT), 83-74
F21 (8/7) @ Washington State W, 70-62
F23 (8/7) @ Washington L, 68-74
F28 (9/8) COLORADO W, 62-52
M1 (9/8) UTAH W, 77-54
M6 (8/7) vs. USC (@ Las Vegas) W, 73-66
M7 (8/7) vs. Stanford (@ Las Vegas) (7) L, 51-67
2018-19
Record: 22-13; 12-6 Pac-12, 4th Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 20th/14th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: RV/23rd
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N6 (RV/23) @ Loyola Marymount L 63-69
N11 (-/23) RICE W 59-50
N14 (-/23) GEORGIA (14) W 80-69
N18 (RV/RV) SETON HALL W 78-62
N22 (RV/RV) North Carolina (@ US Virgin Islands) L 49-83
N23 (RV/RV) Kentucky (@ US Virgin Islands) L 74-75 ot N24 (RV/RV) South Florida (@ US Virgin Islands) (17) L 56-60
D2 INDIANA L 65-67
D7 FRESNO STATE W 89-80
D16 OKLAHOMA STATE W 71-59
D19 @ Illinois-Chicago W 78-47
D28 CAL POLY W 81-35
D30 @ USC (RV) W 72-65
J4 @ California (18) W 84-79 ot
J6 @ Stanford (6) L 80-86
J11 (-/RV) OREGON STATE (10) L 73-83
J 13 (-/RV) OREGON (5) L 52-72
J20 USC L 67-72
J25 @ Arizona State (16) W 61-59
J 27 @ Arizona W 98-93 3ot
F1 WASHINGTON STATE W 83-56
F3 WASHINGTON W 76-60
F8 @ Colorado W 64-60
F10 @ Utah (17) W 100-90
F15 (RV/RV) STANFORD (10) L 51-65
F17 (RV/RV) CALIFORNIA W 80-74
F22 @ Oregon (2) W 74-69
F24 @ Oregon State (12) L 72-75
M1 (RV/RV) UTAH W 76-60
M3 (RV/RV) COLORADO W 84-50
M8 (25/RV) Arizona State (@ Las Vegas) (21) W 73-69
M9 (25/RV) Oregon (@ Las Vegas) (6) L 83-88 ot NCAA College Park, MD Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M23 (20/RV) Tennessee W 89-77
M25 (20/RV) Maryland (9) W 85-80
NCAA Albany, NY Regional - Times Union Center
M25 (20/RV) UConn (2) L 61-69
2017-18
Record: 27-8; 14-4 Pac-12, T3rd
Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 9th/7th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 8th/7th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N10 (8/7) SAN JOSÉ STATE W 129-69
N12 (8/7) PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE W 76-40
N21 (5/4) UCONN (1)
L 60-78
N24 (5/4) Kansas State (@ Las Vegas) W 64-55
N25 (5/4) Creighton (@ Las Vegas) W 72-63
N28 (7/7) UC RIVERSIDE W 68-48
D3 (7/7) UC SANTA BARBARA W 74-44
D8 (7/7) @ Oklahoma State L 72-87
D17 (11/12) @ Seton Hall W 77-68
D20 (11/12) @ Fordham W 67-30
D29 (11/12) @ Stanford L 65-76
D31 (11/12) @ California (20) W 82-46
J5 (14/14) OREGON STATE (17) W 84-49
J7 (14/14) OREGON (10) L 61-70
J12 (14/14) @ Utah W 81-74
J14 (14/14) @ Colorado W 93-55
J19 (13/13) CALIFORNIA (21) W 60-52
J21 (13/13) STANFORD W 64-53
J26 (13/12) @ Washington W 86-69
J28 (13/12) @ Washington State W 79-71
F2 (9/9) USC W 59-46
F5 (8/7) @ USC W 84-70
F9 (8/7) ARIZONA W 69-46
F11 (8/7) ARIZONA STATE (25) W 71-63
F16 (7/7) @ Oregon State (15)
F19 (10/10) @ Oregon (8)
L 64-67 ot
L 94-101 ot
F22 (10/10) COLORADO W 73-67
F24 (10/10) UTAH
W 78-71 ot
M2 (9/9) California (@ Seattle, WA) W 77-74
M3 (9/9) Oregon (@ Seattle, WA) (6) L 62-65
NCAA Los Angeles, CA Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M17 (9/9) AMERICAN W 71-60
M19 (9/9) CREIGHTON W 86-64
NCAA Kansas City, MO Regional - Sprint Center
M23 (9/9) Texas (8)
W 84-75
M25 (9/9) Mississippi State (4) L 73-89
2016-17
Record: 25-9; 13-5 Pac-12, 4th
Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 15th/13th
Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 9th/9th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N11 (9/9) PACIFIC
N14 (9/11) @ Baylor (2)
W 82-55
L 70-84
N18 (9/11) SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY W 95-47
N20 (9/11) CAL POLY
N24 (9/10) Iowa (@ Cancun, Mexico)
W 80-64
W 78-65
N25 (9/10) Toledo (@ Cancun, Mexico) W 75-73
D4 (10/9) HAWAI’I
D11 (9/9) MICHIGAN
W 72-49
W 84-64
D14 (9/9) @ UC Santa Barbara W 71-52
D18 (9/9) @ South Carolina (6) L 57-66
D20 (10/10) @ North Carolina A&T W 83-42
D30 (10/10) UTAH
W 67-56
J1 (10/10) COLORADO (20) W 87-74
J6 (9/7) @ Washington State L 73-82
J8 (9/7) @ Washington L 70-82
J13 (17/13) OREGON STATE (10) W 66-56
J15 (17/13) OREGON W 79-63
J18 (13/11) @ USC W 74-59
J22 (13/11) USC W 71-67
J27 (13/12) ARIZONA STATE (16) W 69-60
J29 (13/12) ARIZONA W 69-49
F3 (13/12) @ California L 77-80
F6 (15/12) @ Stanford (8) W 85-76
F10 (15/12) @ Oregon L 75-84
F12 (15/12) @ Oregon State (9) L 61-68
F17 (18/16) WASHINGTON (9) W 90-79
F19 (18/16) WASHINGTON STATE W 67-48
F24 (15/15) @ Arizona W 79-56
F26 (15/15) @ Arizona State W 55-52
M3 (15/15) Arizona State (@ Seattle, WA) W 77-68
M4 (15/15) Oregon State (@ Seattle, WA) (6) L 53-63
NCAA Los Angeles, CA Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M18 (15/14) BOISE STATE W 83-56
M20 (15/14) TEXAS A&M W 75-43
NCAA Bridgeport, CT Regional - Webster Bank Arena
M25 (15/14) UConn (1) L 71-86
2015-16
Record: 26-9; 14-4 Pac-12, T3rd Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 10th/12th
Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: RV/RV
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N13 ST. JOHN’S W 73-58
N22 SOUTH CAROLINA (2) L 65-68
N27 Louisiana Tech (@ Bahamas) W 68-57 N28 Notre Dame (@ Bahamas) (3) L 84-92 ot
D5 (24/-) CSU BAKERSFIELD W 82-68
D13 (20/-) @ Michigan W 86-77
D16 (19/-) UC IRVINE W 83-48
D18 (19/-) @ Sacramento State W 109-76
D21 (19/-) @
J10 (15/21) @ USC L
J15 (17/23) @ Washington L
J17 (17/23) @ Washington State W
J22 (20/25) CALIFORNIA W 75-56
J24 (20/25) STANFORD (12) W 56-36
J29 (15/19) @ Colorado W
J31 (15/19) @ Utah W 69-63
F5 (14/16) @ Arizona State (8) L 61-65
F7 (14/16) @ Arizona W 73-39
F12 (14/16) WASHINGTON STATE W 73-61
F14 (14/16) WASHINGTON W 63-59
F19 (12/14) @ Oregon W 77-72
F21 (12/14) @ Oregon State (7) L
F26 (14/15) ARIZONA W
F28 (14/15) ARIZONA STATE (9) W 74-61 M4 (12/14) Arizona (@ Seattle, WA) W 72-51
M5 (12/14) California (@ Seattle, WA) W 73-67 ot M6 (12/14) Oregon State (@ Seattle, WA) (8) L 57-69 NCAA Los Angeles, CA Region - 1st/2nd Rounds M19 (10/12) HAWAI’I W 66-50 M21 (10/12) SOUTH FLORIDA (21) W 72-67 NCAA Bridgeport, CT Regional - Webster Bank Arena M26 (10/12) Texas (7) L 64-72
2014-15
Record: 19-18; 8-10 Pac-12, 6th Head Coach: Cori Close Championship Won: Postseason WNIT Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: RV/Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result N14 @ James Madison L 87-91 ot N16 @ North Carolina (13) L 68-84 N23 TEXAS (10/13)
D19 Samford (@ New Orleans, LA) W 71-52
D21 Connecticut (@ Uncasville, CT) (2) L 50-86
D28 NOTRE DAME (4) L 67-82
D30 @ USC W 59-52
J3 OREGON STATE
F26 @ Washington State W 74-69
F28 @ Washington L 61-74
M5 Arizona (@ Seattle, WA) W 80-62
M6 Stanford (@ Seattle, WA) (19) L 62-67
Postseason Women’s National Invitation Tournament - Champion M19 CSU BAKERSFIELD W 70-54
M26 NORTHERN COLORADO W 74-60
M29 SAINT MARY’S W 82-66
M1 @ Michigan W 69-65
A4 @ West Virginia W 62-60
2013-14
Record: 13-18; 7-11 Pac-12, 8th Head Coach: Cori Close
N18 (8/7) BAYLOR (3) W 82-68
N20 JAMES MADISON W 90-61
Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: RV/25th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N8 (-/25) @ Nebraska (12) L 49-77
N11 PEPPERDINE W 82-78
N17 NORTH CAROLINA (12) L 68-78
N24 OKLAHOMA (10) W 82-76
N29 James Madison (@ Naples, FL) L 67-77
N30 Grand Canyon (@ Naples, FL) W 49-67
D1 North Carolina State (@ Naples, FL) L 48-67
D7 @ Notre Dame (4) L 48-90
D15 @ San Diego State W 56-55
D20 @ Minnesota W 58-55
D21 Auburn (@ Minneapolis, MN) L 60-66
D28 CAL POLY W 96-89
D30 USC L 54-56
J3 UTAH W 55-38
J5 COLORADO (12) L 59-61
J10 @ Arizona W 67-61
J12 @ Arizona State (23) L 57-59
J17 OREGON W 88-83
J20 OREGON STATE W 66-63
J24 @ Stanford (4) L 55-72
J26 @ California (16) L 53-69
J31 WASHINGTON L 58-70
F2 WASHINGTON STATE W 79-72
F8 @ USC L 54-69
F14 @ Oregon State L 54-70
F17 @ Oregon W 103-83
F21 CALIFORNIA (18) L 72-77
F23 STANFORD (4/5) L 56-65
F28 @ Colorado L 42-62
M2 @ Utah W62-52
M6 Colorado (@ Seattle, WA) L 65-76
2012-13
Record: 26-8; 14-4 Pac-12, 3rd Head Coach: Cori Close
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 11th/15th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: RV/RV
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N10 SAN DIEGO STATE W 66-52
N14 @ Oklahoma (11) W 86-80
N23 (19/22) NOTRE DAME (5) L 64-76
N25 (19/22) PRINCETON W 65-52
D2 (19/21) LOYOLA MARYMOUNT W 86-66
D8 (17/19) Texas (@ Houston, TX) (12) W 62-42
D15 (14/17) Saint Mary’s (@ Jamaica, NY) W 76-62
D16 (14/17) @ St. John’s W 53-52 ot D20 (12/16) CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE L 72-77
D28 (17/18) @ Pepperdine W 77-46
D31 (16/17) SAINT JOSEPH’S W 73-65
J4 (16/17) @ Oregon W 89-80
J6 (16/17) @ Oregon State W 68-64
J11 (14/15) WASHINGTON STATE W 78-52
J13 (14/15) WASHINGTON W 85-68
J18 (14/15) @ Stanford (6) L 49-75
J20 (14/15) @ California (7) L 65-70
J25 (19/20) ARIZONA W 73-57
J27 (19/20) ARIZONA STATE W 54-50
F1 (18/19) COLORADO (22) W 62-46
F3 (18/19) UTAH W 70-42
F8 (17/17) @ Washington W 65-61
F10 (17/17) @ Washington State W 80-65
F15 (15/16) CALIFORNIA (6) L 51-79
F17 (15/16) STANFORD (4) L 57-68
F19 (17/16) @ USC W 68-54
F24 (17/16) USC W 63-58
M1 (17/16) @ Arizona State W 58-50
M3 (17/16) @ Arizona W 68-57
M8 (14/13) Utah (@ Seattle, WA) W 54-43
M9 (14/13) California (@ Seattle, WA) (5) W 70-58
M10 (14/13) Stanford (@ Seattle, WA) (4) L 49-51 NCAA Columbus, OH Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M23 (11/12) Stetson (@ Columbus, OH) W 66-49
M25 (11/12) Oklahoma (@ Columbus, OH) L 72-85
2011-12
Record: 14-16; 9-9 Pac-12, T5th Head Coach: Cori Close Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 22nd/-
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N11 (22/-) NcNEESE STATE (pre-WNIT) W 67-59
N13 (22/-) TENNESSEE TECH (pre-WNIT) W 74-52
N17 (22/-) @ Baylor (1) L 50-83
N25 (25/-) West Virginia (@Northridge, CA) L 54-63
N26 (25/-) Colgate (@Northridge, CA) W 68-48
N30 SAN DIEGO STATE W 78-71
D4 @ LMU W 84-43
D13 @ LSU L 41-58
D17 TENNESSEE (6) L 64-85
D20 @ Temple L 53-59
D22 @ St. Joseph’s L 60-64
D29 CALIFORNIA W 60-55
D31 STANFORD (4) L 50-77
J5 @ Arizona L 66-74
J7 @ Arizona State W 64-48
J14 USC L 43-47
J19 OREGON STATE W 69-60
J21 OREGON L 62-83
J26 at Utah W 65-60
J29 at Colorado W 62-54 ot
F2 WASHINGTON W 79-73 ot F4 WASHINGTON STATE W 73-52
F9 @ California L 58-67
F12 @ Stanford (4) L 59-82
F19 @ USC L 54-66
F23 ARIZONA STATE W 53-38
F25 ARIZONA W 72-58
M1 @ Washington State L 65-76
M3 @ Washington L 59-67
M7 Arizona (@ Galen Center) L 57-61
2010-11
Record: 28-5; 16-2 Pac-10, 2nd
Head Coach: Nikki Caldwell
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 8th/13th Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 16th/15th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N12 (16/15) @ San Diego State W 55-48
N14 (16/15) UC SANTA BARBARA W 66-52
N18 (15/15) @ Notre Dame (12) W 86-83 2ot N21 (15/15) UC DAVIS W 65-49
N28 (13/13) TEMPLE W 71-61
D3 (13/13) @ LMU W 67-43
D5 (13/13) MONTANA STATE W 54-44
D12 (10/10) @ St. Mary’s W 75-59
D19 (9/9) Hawaii (@ Hilo, HI) W 72-44
D20 (9/9) East Carolina (@Hilo, HI) W 81-67
D28 (8/9) LSU L 53-55
D31 (8/9) @ Washington W 60-48
J2 (8/9) @ Washington State W 80-55
J8 (12/11) USC W 61-42
J13 (10/9) OREGON STATE W 58-46
J15 (10/9) OREGON W 87-57
J20 (8/8) @ Stanford (4) L 38-64
J22 (8/8) @ California W 65-56
J27 (11/10) ARIZONA STATE W 70-60
J29 (11/10) ARIZONA W 70-60
F6 (10/9) @ USC W 74-67
F10 (9/9) @ Oregon W 75-48
F12 (9/9) @ Oregon State W 58-48
F18 (9/9) CALIFORNIA W 63-48
F20 (11/9) STANFORD (3) L 53-67
F24 (11/9) @ Arizona W 74-70
F26 (9/9) @ Arizona State W 61-45
M3 (9/9) WASHINGTON W 60-42
M5 (9/9) WASHINGTON STATE W 66-48
M11 (7/9) California (@ Staples Center) W 63-50
M12 (7/9) Stanford (2) (@ Staples Center) L 55-64 NCAA Spokane, WA Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M19 (8/9) Montana (@ Gonzaga) W 55-47
M 21 (8/9) @ Gonzaga (19) L 75-89
2009-10
Record: 25-9; 15-3 Pac-10, 2nd
Head Coach: Nikki Caldwell
Final AP/USA Today ranking: 22nd/23rd
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N14 Illinois State (@ Iowa City) L 55-61
N15 Santa Clara (@ Iowa City) W 77-51
N19 HAWAII W 98-52
N21 Utah (@San Diego) W 69-33
N25 PRINCETON W 69-59
N28 @ Tennessee (6) L 47-61
D3 @ Kansas (24) L 49-54
D15 @ UC Santa Barbara W 61-49
D18 TEXAS TECH L 58-59
D21 ST. MARY’S W 83-58
D28 LMU W 73-52
J1 @ Arizona W 67-58
J3 @ Arizona State (19) W 74-56
J8 CALIFORNIA W 57-46
J10 STANFORD (2) L 61-65
J17 @ USC L 63-70
J21 Washington State W 59-56
J23 Washington W 69-65
J28 OREGON W 104-80
J30 OREGON STATE W 70-44
F4 @ Stanford (2) L 53-74
F6 @ California W 44-32
F13 USC W 74-56
F18 WASHINGTON W 73-55
F20 WASHINGTON STATE W 93-58
F25 @ Oregon State W 74-53
F27 @ Oregon W 91-75
M4 (-/25) ARIZONA STATE W 63-59
M6 (-/25) ARIZONA W 70-61
M12 (23/23) Oregon State (@ Galen Center) W 60-44
M13 (23/23)
2008-09
2007-08
J19 @ USC L 56-64
J24 OREGON W 63-59
J26 OREGON STATE W 74-70
J31 @ California (9) L 53-67
F2 @ Stanford (7) L 62-75
F8 WASHINGTON STATE W 68-56
F10 WASHINGTON W 75-68
F17 USC L 36-49
F21 @ Oregon State W 55-52
F23 @ Oregon L 55-66
F28 ARIZONA STATE L 67-73
M1 ARIZONA W 80-70
M8 USC (@ San Jose) W 73-52
M9 Stanford (6) (@ San Jose) L 45-78
2006-07
Record: 14-18; 7-11 Pac-10, 7th
Head Coach: Kathy Olivier Pre-season AP/USA Today ranking: 23rd/23rd
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N12 (23/23) UC SANTA BARBARA W 87-62
N16 (20/21) @ Tennessee (4) L 60-83
N18 (20/21) @ UC Riverside W 70-60
N21 (21/19) OKLAHOMA (3) L 68-77
N 24 (21/19) Gonzaga (@ Hawaii) L 57-62
N 25 (21/19) Sacramento St. (@ Hawaii) W 87-64
N 26 (21/19) Texas Tech (@ Hawaii) L 60-75
N 30 @ Cal St. Fullerton W 84-74
D4 @ UC Irvine W 66-62
D8 Delaware St. (@ New Mexico) W 64-54
D9 @ New Mexico (23) L 63-72
D17 BAYLOR (9) L 70-83
D20 CALIFORNIA (15) W 77-68 ot D22 STANFORD (14) L 59-68
D29 @ Washington State W 74-71
D31 @ Washington L 67-72
J5 OREGON STATE L 52-56
J7 OREGON W 77-70
J13 USC L 72-75
J18 @ Arizona State (10) L 52-92
J20 @ Arizona W 76-73
J26 WASHINGTON W 73-67
J28 WASHINGTON ST. W 73-70
F1 @ Oregon L 60-76
F3 @ Oregon State W 75-65
F10 @ USC L 55-62
F15 ARIZONA L 63-66
F18 ARIZONA STATE (10) L 69-80
F22 @ Stanford (8) L 54-65
F24 @ California L 69-88
M2 Washington St. (@ San Jose) W 72-58
M3 Arizona State (10) (@ San Jose) L 64-74
2005-06
Record: 21-11; 12-6 Pac-10, 3rd Head Coach: Kathy Olivier Championship Won: Pac-10 Conf. Tournament Final AP/USA Today ranking: 21st/18th
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N18 @ Baylor (6) L 85-93
N22 BYU L 67-71
N25 Georgia (11) (@ Loyola Tny.) W 84-64
N26 Charlotte (@ Loyola Tny.) W 87-71
N 30 (23/-) UC IRVINE W 92-54
D3 (23/-) @ Clemson W 76-63
D5 (22/25) @ Oklahoma (16) L 78-83
D8 (22/25) PEPPERDINE W 95-56
D17 (24/24) @ UC Santa Barbara L 81-90 ot D20 OREGON W 82-63
D22 OREGON STATE W 79-64
D30 @ California L 58-65
J1 @ Stanford (16) L 68-91
J6 ARIZONA W 84-77
J8 ARIZONA STATE (9) W 77-69
J12 @ Washington (25) L 75-96
J14 @ Washington State W 73-63
J21 @ USC L 70-73
J27 STANFORD (11) W 90-80
J29 CALIFORNIA W 90-87 ot
F2 @ Arizona State (18) L 70-87
UCLA’s Year-By-Year Record
2023-24 Cori Close
Cori Close
Cori
2019-20*** Cori Close
2018-19 Cori Close
2017-18 Cori Close 27-8, (.771) 15-2/8-4 14-4, T3rd Elite Eight 2016-17 Cori Close
(.735)
4th
Sixteen 2015-16 Cori Close 26-9, (.743) 15-1/8-5 14-4, T3rd Sweet Sixteen 2014-15 Cori Close 19-18, (.514) 10-8/7-7 8-10, 6th 2013-14 Cori Close 13-18, (.419) 7-6/5-8 7-11, 8th 2012-13 Cori Close 26-8, (.765) 11-4/10-2 14-4, 3rd
2nd Rd. 2011-12 Cori Close 14-16, (.467) 9-4/4-10 9-9, T5th
1988-89 Billie Moore 12-16, (.429) 8-5/4-10 8-10, 4th 1987-88 Billie Moore 19-11, (.633) 8-5/9-5 12-6, 4th 1986-87 Billie Moore 18-10, (.643) 12-4/6-6 11-7, 4th 1985-86 Billie Moore 12-16, (.429) 4-8/7-6 3-5, 4th 1984-85 Billie Moore 20-10, (.667) 12-5/7-4 10-4, 2nd third ninth 1983-84 Billie Moore 17-12, (.586) 11-5/6-7 6-8, 5th 1982-83 Billie Moore 18-11, (.621) 9-6/7-4 9-5, 3rd fifth
1981-82 Billie Moore 16-14, (.533) 11-6/5-8 7-5, 4th 1980-81 Billie Moore 29-7, (.806) 16-2/9-5 9-3, 2nd third fifth 1979-80
Billie Moore 18-12, (.600) 9-5/7-4 9-3, 2nd fourth 1978-79
Billie Moore 24-10, (.706) 10-1/7-6 7-1, 1st first fourth 1977-78
Billie Moore 27-3, (.900) 13-0/8-2 8-0, 1st first first 1976-77 Ellen Mosher 20-3, (.870) 8-0/8-2 7-1, 1st second second 1975-76 Ellen Mosher 19-4, (.826) 9-0/7-2 12-1, 1st second 1974-75 Kenny Washington 18-4, (.818) 4-1/10-1 9-1, 1st second second * indicates won Conference Tournament Championship *** The 2020 NCAA Tournament was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Records of Bruin Head Coaches
F4 @ Arizona W 90-64
F9 WASHINGTON STATE W 77-50
F11 WASHINGTON
F18 USC
F23 @ Oregon State
73-77
F25 @ Oregon W 66-65
M4 California (@ San Jose) W 80-63
M5 Arizona State (11) (@ San Jose) W 60-59
M6 Stanford (13) (@ San Jose) W 85-78 ot NCAA Cleveland, OH Region - 1st/2nd Rounds
M19 (21/23) Bowling Green (23) (@ Purdue) W 74-61
M21 (21/23) @ Purdue (11) L 54-61
2004-05
Record: 16-12; 10-8 Pac-10, 6th
Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N28 TEXAS (4) W 63-60
D2 (25/-) @ Pepperdine W
D5 (25/-) PURDUE (14) W
D11 (18/20) @ Fresno State W 92-76 D19 (16/17) @ Illinois L 63-78
D21 (20/23) @ Ohio State (10)
(23/24)
J2 (23/24) OREGON ST. W 73-45
J4 (22/23) OREGON W 70-54
J7 (22/23) @ Washington St. W 89-69
J9 (22/23) @ Washington W 74-63
J14 (19/19) ARIZONA ST. L 42-44
J16 (19/19) ARIZONA L 73-84
J20 (25/-) @ Stanford (5) L
J22 (25/-) @ California W
J27 @ Oregon L
J29 @ Oregon St. W
F3 WASHINGTON W 86-81
F6 WASHINGTON ST. W 68-63
F10 @ Arizona L 73-76
F12 @ Arizona St. L 59-80
F18 CALIFORNIA W 73-61
F20 STANFORD (4) L 68-81
F26 @ USC L 77-80
M5 Arizona St. (@ San Jose) L 71-73
2003-04
Record: 17-13; 11-7 Pac-10, T-3rd
Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N23 UNLV W 61-51
N25 @ Texas (2) L 58-89
N30 ILLINOIS W 68-56
D6 @ St. Mary’s L 52-53
D13 Purdue (@ Indianapolis) (8) L 57-58
D17 @ Cal St. Northridge W 74-66
D19 MICHIGAN ST. (24) L 43-47
D21 FRESNO ST. W 69-56
D28 @ USC L 51-64
D30 OHIO ST. (18) W 71-56
J2 @ Oregon St. L 68-82
J4 @ Oregon W 63-57
J9 WASHINGTON ST. W 78-58
J11 WASHINGTON W 65-60
J15 @ Arizona St. L 58-73
J17 @ Arizona L 54-70
J23 STANFORD (ot) (6) L 71-78
J25 CALIFORNIA W 67-66
J29 OREGON L 55-61
J31 OREGON ST. W 91-58
F5 @ Washington W 64-59
F7 @ Washington St. W 78-57
F12 ARIZONA (24) W 87-68
F14 ARIZONA ST. W 73-64
F19 @ California W 97-69
F21 @ Stanford (10) L 54-63
F29 USC W 68-64
M6 Arizona St. (@ San Jose) W 70-50
M7 Stanford (12) (@ San Jose) L 66-70
NCAA Mideast 1st Round - Minneapolis, MN
M21 @ Minnesota (24) L 81-92
2002-03
Record: 18-11; 12-6 Pac-10, 4th Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N23 @ Hawaii L 66-70
N24 Sacramento St. (@ Hawaii) W 106-43
N30 Northwestern St.(@ UNLV) W 82-74
D1 @ UNLV W 72-64
D3 ST. MARY’S W 72-60
D6 @ Georgia (14) L 83-91
D14 @ Pepperdine L 67-88
D19 BAYLOR L 77-89
D21 CAL ST. NORTHRIDGE W 89-49
D27 @ Oregon W 93-68
D29 @ Oregon St. W 58-54
J3 WASHINGTON W 72-46
J5 WASHINGTON ST. W 93-51
J12 USC W 72-64
J16 @ Arizona St. W 60-58
J18 @ Arizona (22) L 61-80
J24 STANFORD (5) L 78-80
J26 CALIFORNIA L 61-69
J30 @ Washington St. W 86-70
F1 @ Washington (25) L 77-111
F8 @ USC L 68-72
F14 ARIZONA (24) W 48-47
F16 ARIZONA ST. W 71-62
F20 @ California W 72-54
F22 @ Stanford (9) L 61-79
F27 OREGON ST. W 82-71
M1 OREGON W 56-54
M8 Oregon (@ San Jose) W 71-58
M9 Stanford (9) (@ San Jose) L 64-69
2001-02
Record: 9-20; 4-14 Pac-10, 8th
Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N16 Liberty (@ Michigan St.) W 62-55
N17 @ Michigan St. L 63-67
N24 OHIO STATE W 64-60
N27 BYU W 73-62
D8 COLORADO (15)
D16 @ Baylor (9)
D20 OREGON
D22 OREGON ST.
D28 @ Stanford (6)
L 48-79
L 59-92
L 67-76
L 65-79
L 50-81
D30 @ California W 64-48
J4 @ Washington L 53-86
J6 @ Washington St. W 76-64
J13 USC
L 57-67
J17 ARIZONA ST. (23) L 57-70
J 19 ARIZONA
J24 @ Oregon St.
J26 @ Oregon
60-71
36-77
54-76
F1 WASHINGTON ST. W 79-55
F3 WASHINGTON
48-68
F5 @ Long Beach St. W 77-73
F9 @ USC L 58-71
F14 @ Arizona L 62-77
F16 @ Arizona St. L 42-64
F22 CALIFORNIA W 58-48
F24 STANFORD (2) L 80-98
M1 California (@ Oregon) W 46-42
M2 Stanford (2) (@ Oregon) L 61-96
2000-01
Record: 6-23; Pac-10 5-13, 10th
Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Date Rank* Opponent (Rank) Result
N10 Duke (@ Albuquerque) (5)
N11 @ New Mexico
N17 UTAH
N25 @ BYU
N28 SAN DIEGO
L 52-80
L 54- 75
L 42-65
L 53-68
L 67-86
D2 @ Colorado L 63-88
D10 LONG BEACH ST. W 86-60
D18 @ Old Dominion
D21 @ Ohio State
D28 PEPPERDINE
D30 GEORGIA (4)
J4 @ Washington
J6 @ Washington St.
J14 USC
J18 ARIZONA ST.
J20 ARIZONA (ot) (19)
J25 @ Oregon St.
J27 @ Oregon (20)
F2 STANFORD
F4 CALIFORNIA
F10 @ USC
F15 @ Arizona
F17 @ Arizona St. (24)
F 23 OREGON
F 25 OREGON ST.
M 1 @ California
M 3 @ Stanford
F19 (24/23) ARIZONA (15) W 80-66
F24 (22/22) @ Oregon L 72-89
F26 (22/22) @ Oregon St. L 52-72
M3 STANFORD (25) W 64-61
M5 CALIFORNIA L 53-61
M9 @ Washington St. W 96-86 M11 @ Washington W 85-66
NCAA Mideast 1st Round - Notre Dame, IN M17 George Washington L 72-79
1998-99
Record: 26-8; Pac-10 15-3, T-1st Head Coach: Kathy Olivier
Mar. 19, 1983: West Regional 1st Rd. at Willamette, OR (Sparks Center - Oregon State)
UCLA 62 — Joyner 6, Dean 2, Thompson 24, McCoy 5, McFadden 0, Hardy 7, Jones 12, Thurston 4, Alston 2. Oregon State 75 — Martin 23, Coleman 6, Spoelstra 8, Sturzenegger 9, Clark 23, Coleman 6, Lopez 0, Channel 3, Mothershed 3, Novo 0. Half — Oregon State 39, UCLA 26. Attn. — 1,523.
Led by four-time All-American Ann Meyers, Anita Ortega, Denise Curry and first-year head coach Billie Moore, UCLA captured the 1978 AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women) national basketball championship in Pauley Pavilion. The title drive included Bruin wins in the final 21 games of the season and culminated in the 90-74 championship victory over Maryland before an AIAW record crowd of 9,351.In all, the Final Four weekend drew more than 17,000 fans to Pauley Pavilion and included a national semifinal win over Montclair State by an 85-77 count.
After capturing the WCAA conference championship, the road to the Final Four began with regional wins in Stanford, CA over Stanford (80-54), Long Beach State (79-78) and UNLV (100-88). Sectional wins followed over BYU (102-57) and Stephen F. Austin (86-60). UCLA finished with a 27-3 record, with all three losses coming on the road against top-10 ranked opponents. It averaged 96.2 points per game and outscored its opponents by an average of 28 points per contest.
AIAW Semifinals - Mar. 23, 1978
UCLA dominated the game, taking a 52-38 lead into halftime and never relinquishing it. Three Bruins recorded double-doubles - Denise Curry with 22 points and 14 rebounds, Heidi Nestor with 22/10 and Ann Meyers with 19/14. The Bruins controlled the boards, outrebounding Montclair State 61-29. MSC had 40 points from Carol Blazejowski but only 37 from the rest of the team.
Montclair State 77
AIAW Finals - Mar. 25, 1978
UCLA never trailed in the game and led by as many as 19 points, 74-55, before winning its first-ever national title 90-74 in front of an AIAW National Championship record crowd of 9,351. Ann Meyers recorded her second consecutive double-double, tallying 20 points and 10 rebounds, to go along with nine assists and eight steals. Anita Ortega led all scorers with 23 points.
Maryland 74
UCLA 90
Each member of UCLA’s 1978 National Championship squad was in attendance on Feb. 17, 2008 in Pauley Pavilion to celebrate the 30th Anniversary of UCLA’s first women’s basketball title, a 90-74 victory over Maryland.
The players, coaches and staff were honored at halftime of the UCLA-USC game and presented with national championship rings for the first time ever. At the time of their championship, they simply received championship watches.
1978 National Championship Team (l-r): Heidi Nestor, Beth Moore, Tam Breckenridge, Ann Meyers Drysdale, Denise Curry, Assistant Coach Colleen Matsuhara, Head Coach Billie Moore, Denise Corlett, Team Manager Yvette Duran-Hardin, Janet Hopkins, Dianne Frierson, Debbie Willie, Sports Information Director Michael Sondheimer, Associate Athletic Director Dr. Judith Holland, Anita Ortega.
Denise Curry
Anita Ortega
Billie Moore and Dr. Judith Holland
Ann Meyers Drysdale
The Bruins captured their first Pac-10 Conference championship in 1999. UCLA posted a 15-3 conference record, the most Pac-10 wins in its history. Its 26-8 overall record included the most wins by a Bruin team since the 1981 squad went 29-7. Coach Kathy Olivier’s unit went on to advance further in the NCAA tournament, with a trip to the Elite Eight, than any other Bruin team in history. It marked UCLA’s sixth overall tournament appearance and first-ever back-to-back appearances. In addition, the #3 seeding into the tournament was a school-best.
UCLA’s run to the Elite Eight began in Pauley Pavilion, as the Bruins hosted Wisconsin-Green Bay for a first-round matchup. Four Bruin players scored in double-figures to lead UCLA to a 76-69 victory, setting up a second-round matchup with Kentucky. Pac-10 Player of the Year and Kodak All-American Maylana Martin led all players with 21 points, 15 coming from the free throw line, and Marie Philman posted a double-double with 16 points and 10 boards in the 87-63 win over the Wildcats.
UCLA continued its playoff run with a West Regional contest against seventh-ranked Colorado State at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. The Bruins’ hopes suffered an early setback when point guard Erica Gomez sprained her ankle in the game’s first minute, but freshman Michelle Greco stepped in and helped keep the team on course to a 26-25 lead at the half. It was a tight game throughout, and the Bruins led by one point, 67-66, with 2:12 to play when LaCresha Flannigan made five of six free throws down the stretch to put the game away UCLA advanced to its first-ever Elite Eight with a 77-68 decision and a date with third-ranked Louisiana Tech.
The Bruins played some of their best basketball of the year in jumping out to a 28-18 lead at the 7:23 mark of the first half in the Regional championship battle. However, the Lady Techsters scored the next 11 points in the game and led 3532 at the break. The Bruins regained the lead at 38-37, but it would be their last of the contest as Tech rolled to a 88-62 win. Martin led four Bruins in double digits with 16 points.
The team set a school and Pac-10 record for steals in a season with 435 and for best field goal percentage in a game with a .695 mark (41-59 fg) at Washington State on February 25. The overall team shooting percentage for the season of .476 (ninth-best in the nation) was the best
by a Bruin team since 1983-84 (.491). Opponents were held to .400 shooting in the 1999 season, which was the lowest mark since the 1978 UCLA team limited opponents to .395. The scoring average of 85.2 points per contest ranked fifth-best in the nation.
The attendance of 9,530 fans which gathered to witness the USC game on January 23 was the largest ever to see a women’s game in UCLA’s Pauley Pavilion, surpassing the total of 9,351 which were on hand for the 1978 AIAW National Championship game vs. Maryland. The team’s final ranking of No. 7 in the USA Today coaches poll marked UCLA’s highest finish ever in that poll and the best finish in either poll since a No. 7 ranking in the Associated Press listings in 1981.
Martin, led the conference in scoring with an 18.2 mark and ranked as the second-leading rebounder at 9.4 caroms per contest.Martin, who was a finalist for the Naismith Award presented to the nation’s outstanding player, exploded for a career-best 38 points (seventhhighest total in school history) in a win at USC in which she connected on 13-19 shots from the field and 12-14 free throws. The junior also grabbed a career-best matching 18 rebounds in that game.
UCLA’s biggest surprise during the season was the play of sophomore guard Flannigan, who earned first-team All-Pac-10 honors as well. She was the second-leading scorer on the team behind Martin with a 14.1 mark and managed to do most of her damage in the conference, where she averaged 17.2 points per game.
an honorable mention All-Pac-10 selection, averaged 12.5 points per game and ranked fourth in the conference in rebounding with a 7.9 mark. During the year, Hubbard pulled down 22 rebounds in a game vs. Arizona on March 6, the fourth-highest single-game total in school history. Earlier in the year, she had scored a career-best 29 points against UConn. Philman scored 11.1 points per game and grabbed five boards. She set or tied her career high in points in four games during the season, including a best of 24 vs. Washington on January 28.
The Bruins’ third first-team All-Pac-10 selection was Gomez, who broke Ann Meyers’ (544) school record for career assists. Gomez set the record at home against Arizona State on March 4 and finished her junior season with 573 assists. She also established a school record for assists in a single-game with 16 in the game at Arizona State on January 5. Her season assist average of 6.67 edged Mary Hegarty’s old school record of 6.66 for best single-season mark.
Two other starters averaged in double figures for the Bruins in the championship season. Junior center Janae Hubbard,
The Bruin bench was a big reason for the success of this team, and three players were the primary contributors. Junior Melanie Pearson appeared in all 34 games and averaged 8.5 points while leading the team with 40 three-point goals. Junior Carly Funicello provided valuable assistance on the inside. She averaged 5.6 points and 4.1 rebounds per game and saw action in 31 contests. Greco was the third key member of the team, providing a lift off the bench. Greco, who was named to the All-Pac-10 freshman team and to the NCAA West Regional All-Tournament team, scored at a 7.8 points per game clip and handed out 94 assists in 34 games.
Maylana Martin cuts down the nets at Pauley Pavilion after the Bruins clinched their first-ever Pac-10 title in 1999.
Head coach Kathy Olivier celebrates on the bench with players during the Bruins’ Sweet 16 win.
Led by the Triple Threat of Nikki Blue, Noelle Quinn and Lisa Willis, the Bruins entered the 2006 State Farm Pac-10 Tournament as the third seeded team and proceeded to knock off California (#6 seed), Arizona State (#2) and Stanford (#1) on consecutive days in the HP Pavilion in San Jose, CA to win the school’s first-ever conference tournament championship.
Willis was named the Most Valuable Player of the Tournament after averaging 20.3 points per game over the three days. Blue, who set a tournament record with 11 assists in the win over Cal, was named to the All-Tournament team for the fourth consecutive season, becoming the first Pac-10 player to accomplish this feat. Quinn, who led the Bruins with 22 points in the championship win over Stanford, was also selected to the All-Tournament Team.
As the No. 3 seed in the tournament, the Bruins had a first-round bye and then faced No. 6 California in the second round. The Bruin defense was swarming, setting a Pac-10 Tournament record with 20 steals in the game and forcing a total of 23 California turnovers in a 80-63 victory. Offensively, four Bruins were in double-figure scoring, with doubledoubles from Noelle Quinn (18 points/10 rebounds) and Nikki Blue (14 points/Pac-10 Tournament record 11 assists). Lisa Willis was one steal shy of Blue’s Tournament steals record, finishing with seven, and also had 14 points. Chinyere Ibekwe added 10 and Ortal Oren scored eight off the Bruin bench which contributed a total of 21 points for the game. Cal led early in the game, but UCLA went on an 8-0 run to take an 11-5 lead that it never relinquished. The Golden Bears used a 6-0 second-half run to close to within eight, 50-42, with 13:05 on the clock, but Willis stopped Cal’s momentum by burying a three-pointer. Willis’ three jump-started a 17-4 Bruin run that gave UCLA a 67-46 lead and put the game away. UCLA went on to lead by as many as 22 points, 75-53.
In the semifinals, UCLA matched up against No. 2 seed Arizona State and got a huge second-half surge from Willis to come away with a 60-59 victory that not only sent the Bruins to the title game but gave head coach Kathy Olivier her 200th career victory. UCLA got off to a slow start in the game and trailed, 28-19, at the half. The second half saw seven ties and 11 lead changes, the last coming when Quinn made two free throws with 28.9 seconds remaining. UCLA forced a turnover in the final seconds to secure the win, but it was Willis’ 20 second-half points that put the Bruins in position for the win. Willis finished with 27 points, five three-point shots, two blocks and six steals. Quinn contributed another double-double with 16 points, 10 rebounds, three steals, two assists and two blocks for the Bruins, who snapped ASU’s school-record 10-game winning streak. The Bruin defense came through again, forcing 26 Sun Devil turnovers, 17 via steals.
With UCLA in the Championship game for the first time in the Tournament’s history, only No. 1 seed and three-time defending champion Stanford stood in the way of the Tournament crown. The two teams had split the regular season series, with each winning at home. UCLA trailed by as many as 13 points in the second half of the game and by seven points, 70-63, with 1:29 to play but refused to give up. The Bruins scored the final seven points in regulation time with a basket by Quinn with five seconds to play knotting the score at 70. A three-point shot by Lindsey Pluimer pushed the Bruins into a 73-72 lead in overtime they would not give up. Two big free throws by Ibekwe with 28 seconds to play in overtime gave UCLA an 80-76 advantage. UCLA hits five of six free throws down the stretch while holding Stanford without a basket to earn its first conference tournament championship. Quinn finished with 22 points and eight rebounds. Willis added 20 points, four assists and six steals. Pluimer contributed 16, and Blue had 14 points, eight assists and six steals.
The Bruins set several tournament records - Quinn with 23 field goals; Willis with 11 made three-point shots, 19 steals and a 6.3 steals average; Blue with 11 assists in the Cal game and an assist average of 8.3. UCLA also set a tournament record with 20 steals in the game against California, and their total of 52 for the three games in the tournament were a record.
With the NCAA automatic bid in hand, the Bruins traveled to Purdue for the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament. In the first round against 23rd-ranked Bowling Green, UCLA used an 18-1 run in the first half to turn a 13-15 deficit into a 31-16 lead and went on to win by a final score of 74-61. The Triple Threat once again dominated, combining to score 51 of the Bruins’ 74 points. Willis led all players with 23 points and 12 rebounds, the 15th NCAA Tournament double-double in UCLA history. Quinn added 21 points with seven rebounds, and Blue contributed seven points and six assists. Pluimer also had a solid game with eight points and 10 rebounds. UCLA outshot Bowling Green, 46.9-36.5% and outrebounded the Falcons, 49-31. Willis set a school record for three-point shots made in the NCAA Tournament, connecting on five treys.
Although UCLA’s NCAA Tournament run ended in the next round against 11th-ranked Purdue, the 2006 Bruins enjoyed a stellar season, finishing the year with 21 victories and 12 conference wins (third-most in school history) and placing three players (Blue, Quinn, Willis) on the AP honorable mention All-America team.
Chinyere Ibekwe and Lindsey Pluimer
Freshman point guard Jordin Canada scored a career-high 31 points to lead the UCLA women’s basketball team past West Virginia, 62-60, to win the 2015 Women’s National Invitation Tournament (WNIT) on April 4, 2015 at the Charleston (W.Va.) Civic Center.
Canada connected on 9 of 19 shots from the field and made 13 of 15 free throws, helping UCLA (19-18) win its sixth consecutive game. She was the Bruins’ only player to score in double figures, shattering her previous career high of 19 points, in addition to tallying four steals and two assists. She was named the WNIT MVP.
West Virginia’s Averee Fields led the Mountaineers with 17 points. WVU also received 14 points from Bria Holmes and 10 points from Linda Stepney. The Bruins scored the first four points of the game and led 12-9 on a pair of free throws by Kelli Hayes at the 12:32 mark. But West Virginia would go on a 15-6 run to build their largest lead of six points (24-18) with 5:51 left in the first half. Jordin Canada would tie the game on a layup at 26-26 (1:18). Canada would get her third steal of the first half and race down the floor, beating the buzzer to give UCLA a 30-28 lead at the break. Her 14 points in the first half led all scorers.
UCLA took the lead for good with fewer than four minutes to play in the game. West Virginia’s Crystal Leary made one of two free throws with 4:31 to play, pushing the Mountaineers ahead, 53-50.
Kari Korver, who finished with five points and six rebounds, nailed a 3-pointer at the 4:19 mark to tie the contest 53-53.
After a missed jump shot by West Virginia, Canada made a layup with 3:45 remaining to put UCLA ahead by a 55-53 margin. An ensuing steal and layup by Kelli Hayes gave UCLA a 57-53 advantage with 3:19 remaining.
West Virginia trimmed its deficit to two points (57-55) with less than three minutes to play. UCLA added to its lead with 49 seconds to play, as Monique Billings made one of two free throws, putting the Bruins ahead, 58-55.
A layup by Stepney cut UCLA’s lead to 58-57 with 44 seconds to play, before Canada answered with a layup at the 25-second mark. Canada helped UCLA ice the victory with a steal and two ensuing free throws with 19 seconds remaining to put UCLA ahead, 61-57. The Bruins held on in the final moments for the 62-60 win.
Prior to Saturday’s victory over West Virginia, UCLA had not won a postseason tournament since upsetting Stanford to win the 2006 Pac-10 Tournament. This marked the Bruins’ first-ever WNIT Tournament appearance and was the latest UCLA had ever played a basketball game.
UCLA won its first-ever WNIT title with a 62-60 win over West Virginia in Charleston, W. Va., on April 4, 2015.
Head Coach Cori Close cuts the final piece off of the net after guiding her team to the WNIT Championship. WNIT MVP Jordin Canada was lifted onto the shoulders of her teammates after scoring a career-high 31 points.
In 2017-18, the Bruins made their first appearance in the Elite Eight since 1999 while reaching the Sweet Sixteen for the third straight season in the process, the first time in UCLA history that a team accomplished that feat. UCLA posted a 14-4 record in the Pac-12, which tied for third in the league, while surpassing the 25-point win plateau for the third consecutive year (27-8).
UCLA’s run to the Elite Eight began in Pauley Pavilion, as the Bruins hosted American in a first-round matchup. Senior Monique Billings scored 20 points and had 10 rebounds, Kennedy Burke added 15 points as third-seeded UCLA posted a 71-60 win. Jordin Canada had 10 points and 11 assists for the Bruins. After the Eagles took an early lead to start the game, the Bruins countered with a 22-3 run over the final 4:33 of the opening quarter to build a double-digit advantage and take control. Billings scored 10 points during the UCLA surge as the Bruins opened a 27-12 lead after the first quarter. American cut the lead to 45-41 following Liddane’s basket at the 4:33 mark of the third quarter but UCLA rallied and upped its lead to 63-48 on a bucket by Lajahna Drummer with 6:48 to play and cruised to the victory.
UCLA continued its playoff run as Jordin Canada scored 21 points and junior Japreece Dean added 16 points to lead thirdseeded UCLA to an 86-64 victory over No. 11 seed Creighton in the second round of the women’s NCAA Tournament. Canada, made six of seven shots and dished out eight assists to lead the Bruins. The senior guard was the 2018 Pac 12 Defensive Player of the Year. Billings scored 15 points and Burke added 11 points for UCLA. The Bruins scored on eight of their first nine possessions to jump to an early double-digit lead. Dean’s 3-pointer at the 4:12 mark of the opening quarter gave UCLA an 18-7 lead. The Bruins kept the defensive pressure on the Bluejays and led 26-15 after the first quarter. UCLA continued to use its speed and quickness in the second quarter and forced 10 first half turnovers while upping its lead to 49-32 at the break, following a pair of free throws by Billings down the stretch. Billings led the Bruins with 13 points in the first half. Creighton never got closer than 17 points in the second half. The Bruins improved to 15-2 at home on the season.
In the Sweet Sixteen game against Texas, Canada was struggling with her shot, the Longhorns had emerged from the locker room on a run and No. 3 UCLA was suddenly reeling in a game that was shaping up a lot like their Sweet 16 matchup two years ago. This time, Canada and the Bruins rose to the occasion. Canada finished with 22 points, often putting the third-seeded Bruins on her back, and UCLA held on for an 84-75 victory to avenge that frustrating loss to the Longhorns. Billings added 17 points and Burke had 15 for the Bruins, who finally made it to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament after falling a game short the past two seasons. Texas made one last charge when it got back-to-back 3-pointers from Ariel Atkins and Alecia Sutton to close within 76-72 with less than two minutes left. But Burke answered with a layup for UCLA, and Canada’s jumper with just under a minute to go helped put the game away. UCLA wound up shooting 56.3 percent from the field in the second half.
Teaira McCowan had 23 points and 21 rebounds, Victoria
Vivans added 24 points and top-seeded Mississippi State beat relentless UCLA 89-73 in Kansas City’s Sprint Center to reach its second straight Final Four. Canada led the third-seeded Bruins (27-8) with 23 points, eight rebounds and five assists. Dean finished with 16 points, and Billings and Burke had 12 apiece, most of it coming when the Bruins were trying to rally from a 50-32 deficit. They closed within 74-68 on Dean’s 3-pointer with 2:53 left, but they couldn’t get a stop on the defensive end. Instead, they traded basket-for-basket down the stretch, and Mississippi State managed to clinch the win from the foul line in the final minute.
Canada finished as the second-leading scorer in UCLA history with 2,153 career points and is the UCLA and Pac-12 Conference’s all-time assists leader (831). This past season, the three-time All-Pac-12 and three-time All-America selection led the team in scoring at 17.0 points per game. She also led the team in assists (7.1 apg) and steals (3.3 spg) while averaging 3.7 rebounds per game.
Billings finished as the ninth-leading scorer in UCLA history with 1,761 career points and is UCLA’s all-time blocks leader (228). She is also second on the Bruins’ career charts in rebounds (1,159) and first in career games played (141). This past season, the threetime All-Pac-12 honoree was second on the team in scoring (15.3 ppg) and led the team and the Pac-12 in rebounding (9.5 rpg) and in double-doubles (17).
Senior point guard Jordin Canada
and 4.0
The UCLA bench erupts at the end of the 2018 NCAA Second Round game after Chrissy Baird drained a three-pointer.
averaged 19.0 points, 8.0 assists, 5.3 rebound
steals per game in the Bruins’ Elite Eight run in 2018.
The Bruins traveled to Indianapolis as the No. 2 seed of a 15-team tournament in early March, ready to face a gauntlet of conference foes and looking to make a splash in their first year as members of the Big Ten. UCLA finished the regular season 27-2, marking new records in consecutive wins (23), in most wins (27) and in consecutive weeks ranked No. 1 in the country (12) by the Associated Press, but fell one win short of a regular season conference championship.
UCLA earned a double bye as it finished the conference play in the top four of the Big Ten, starting the postseason championship in the quarterfinal round. The Bruins opened the 2025 TIAA Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament against No. 10-seed Nebraska – UCLA downed the Cornhuskers 91-54 on Dec. 29 in the regular season matchup between the teams. The Bruins jumped out to a 10-point lead after the first quarter of the tournament game; junior Gabriela Jaquez shined early, scoring seven points in the first three minutes of play. The Cornhuskers fought back and brought it to a one-score game at the break, but the Bruins outscored Nebraska 21-16 in the third frame. UCLA finished the Huskers off with a strong fourth quarter, shooting 9-for-16 from the field in the final period to close out the quarterfinals. Junior Lauren Betts racked up 28 points (11-15 FG, 6-7 FT) and 13 rebounds for her 17th double-double of the season. The unanimous Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year also had five assist, zero turnovers, seven blocks and three steals. Jaquez finished with 23 points and nine rebounds as the Bruins captured victory, 85-74.
The Bruins moved on to face No. 3-seed Ohio State in what would end up as a commanding win in the semifinals. UCLA had doubled up the Buckeyes by halftime, holding a 44-21 at the break. Eight Bruins scored in the first half; UCLA shot a scorching 20-for-30 from the field (4-6 3FG) through the first 20 minutes. Junior Londynn Jones was UCLA’s leading scorer with 22 points (6-12 3FG). Betts had 12 points in just 23 minutes, shot 6-for-7 from the field. Jaquez had a perfect shooting performance, 12 points on 5-of-5 shooting (2-2 3FG). Graduate forward Angela Dugalic finished with 10 points, nine rebounds, two blocks and two steals against the Buckeyes.
Looking to avenge the loss it took in the final game of the regular season, UCLA suited up against No. 1-seed USC in the championship game. Both teams got off to a quick start but the Bruins fell slightly behind, 24-19, after the first 10 minutes of play. Junior Timea Gardiner laced a
3-pointer and Rice sunk a late layup in transition to pull the Bruins closer to the Trojans, but USC stacked a few scores and capitalized on UCLA’s 10 first-half turnovers to take a 45-35 lead at the break.
The Bruins came out of the halftime break determined and prepared for battle. UCLA stalled USC’s offense, only allowing four made baskets in the third quarter. The Bruins roared back with a 10-2 run to close the frame; Betts had nine of UCLA’s 17 points in the third. UCLA trailed 54-52 heading into the final period.
UCLA’s defense proved overwhelming in the fourth quarter, holding the Trojans to zero field goals made for nearly nine minutes. Betts collected three blocks as UCLA outscored USC 20-13 to close out the program’s first Big Ten Tournament and claim the championship trophy.
UCLA headed into the NCAA Tournament as the No. 1 overall seed, marking the program’s first No. 1 ranking in the postseason tournament. The Bruins played the first and second rounds in front of the home crowd for the third-consecutive year; No. 1 UCLA downed No. 16 Southern (84-46) and No. 8 Richmond (84-67) in backto-back games at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom.
The Bruins made a trip north to the Spokane 1 Regional Tournament where they would face No. 5 Ole Miss in the first of two SEC battles. UCLA handed the Rebels a 14-point loss in the Sweet 16 behind a 31-point, 10-rebound outing by the UCLA center, Lauren Betts (15-16 FG). UCLA got its rematch with No. 3 LSU in the Elite 8; the Bruins fended off a 28-point game from Flau’Jae Johnson thanks to strong efforts by Jaquez (18 PTS, 5-7 FG, 4-5 3FG), Betts (17 PTS, 6 BLK) and Gardiner.
With the win over LSU, UCLA advanced the NCAA Final Four for the first time in program history; the Bruins reached the national semifinal game in the 1978 and 1979 AIAW tournaments, prior to the establishment of NCAA women’s basketball.
The Bruins would fall to the eventual national champions, the UConn Huskies, in the Final Four.
A CLOSER LOOK AT UCLA’S TITLES
UCLA’s collegiate sports championship history stands out as one of the most impressive of any university in the nation. UCLA has proudly totaled 124 NCAA team championships (heading into the 2025-26 school year), an accomplishment that speaks to the Bruins’ commitment to excellence. UCLA’s student-athletes have consistently performed at an elite level in their sports, studies and public service. This well-rounded approach has helped to create champions on the field and in the community.
UCLA won a school-record five NCAA team titles during the 1981-82 school year, with softball, men’s swimming & diving, men’s tennis, men’s volleyball and women’s outdoor track & field.The Bruins’ athletic programs have captured four NCAA team championships in eight school years and have totaled three titles eight times.
The athletics department has seen 17 of its teams win the NCAA title after having posted an undefeated record. Those sports include men’s tennis (five times), men’s basketball (four), men’s volleyball (three), women’s water polo (three) and men’s water polo (two). Most recently, the UCLA women’s water polo team compiled a perfect record of 26-0 in the spring of 2024.