
Address
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Address
J.D. Morgan Center, PO Box 24044
Los Angeles, CA 90024-0044
Athletic Dept. Phone (310) 825-8699
Ticket Office (310) UCLA-WIN
Chancellor Dr. Julio Frank
The Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics
Martin Jarmond
Faculty Athletic Rep. Dr. Michael Teitell
Associate Ath. Director/M. Volleyball Gavin Crew
Enrollment 44,947
Founded 1919
Colors Blue and Gold
Nickname Bruins
Conference (MPSF) Mountain Pacific Sports Federation
Conference Phone (530) 669-7600
Conference Website www.mpsports.org
National Affiliation NCAA Division I
Home Courts (Capacities) Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom (13,800) John Wooden Center (2,000)
Home Records at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom (488-102, .827)
............................................ at JWC (93-21, .816)
Head Coach (Alma Mater) John Hawks
Hawks’ Career Record 40-17 (.707), 2 seasons
Associate Head Coach Milan Zarkovic
Assistant Coach Alex Knight
Assistant Coach ................................................ Lindsay Brown
Director of Operations, Technical Coordinator ............ AJ Ruttenberg
Statistician................................................................. Rob Chai
Athletic Trainer .................................................... David Wacker
Staff Equipment Manager ....................................... Nathan Reft
Assoc. Director Athletic Performance .................... Dawn Malone
Alumni Relations ................................................... Nancy Ishiki
Academic Counselor .......................................... Linda Lassiter
2025 Overall Record ........................................................22-7
2025 MPSF Record/Finish 11-2, 1st
2025 MPSF Tournament Finish Third
2025 NCAA Finish Runner-Up
NCAA Post-Season Record 60-10 (.846)
NCAA Titles 21
NCAA VB Tournament Appearances 30
MVB Contact: Michael Abbott Email: mabbott@athletics.ucla.edu
Abbott’s Cell Phone (310) 909-9367 Website www.uclabruins.com
CREDITS
The 2026 UCLA Men’s Volleyball media guide was written and edited by Michael Abbott, Assistant Director, Athletic Communications. Special assistance and thanks to Nancy Ishiki and Rich Bertolucci. Photography by ASUCLA Campus Studio (Don Liebig) and UCLA Creative Staff. Special thanks to Getty Images, USA Volleyball, Christopher Shannon and the FIVB for their photos. The men’s volleyball media guide is only available online.
The volleyball world lost a great friend in long-time UCLA SID Rich Bertolucci, who passed away in the summer of 2015. The Bruin family wishes to dedicate the annual record book each year to Rich. His hard work will live on. Our hearts also go out to the family of Ed Chan. He lived each day to help more people see the beauty in the sport of volleyball.
FOLLOW THE BRUINS
Men’s Volleyball Twitter: @UCLAMVB Volleyball Instagram: @UCLAMVB Volleyball TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@uclamvb Volleyball Facebook: /UCLAMVB

Date Opponent (site) Time (PT)
Jan. 9 McKendree (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm
Jan. 11 Concordia* (Pauley Pavilion) 5:00 pm
Jan. 17 Ball State^ - FPCC (Phoenix, Ariz.) 7:00 pm (PT)
Jan. 18 Loyola Chicago^ - FPCC (Phoenix, Ariz)7:00 pm (PT)
Jan. 22 Fort Valley State (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
Jan. 23 UC San Diego (La Jolla, CA) 7:00 pm (PT)
Jan. 27 Vanguard* (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
Jan. 29 Ohio State (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
Feb. 6 Long Beach State (Long Beach, CA) 7:00 pm (PT)
Feb. 7 Vanguard* (Costa Mesa, CA) 7:00 pm (PT)
Feb. 13 CSUN (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
Feb. 19 TBA TBA
Feb. 20 TBA TBA
Feb. 25 UC Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, CA) 7:00 pm (PT)
Feb. 27 UC Irvine (Irvine, CA) 7:00 pm (PT)
March 4 USC* (Galen Center) 7:00 pm (PT)
March 6 USC* (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
March 12 Lewis (Outrigger Invite) Manoa, HI 7:00 pm (PT)
March 13 Mt. Olive (Outrigger Invite) Manoa, HI 7:00 pm (PT)
March 14 Hawaii (Outrigger Invite) Manoa, HI 10:00 pm (PT)
March 27 @ Stanford* (Stanford, CA) 6:00 pm (PT)
March 28 @ Stanford* (Stanford, CA) 6:00 pm (PT)
April 2 @ Pepperdine* (Malibu, CA) 6:00 pm (PT)
April 4 Pepperdine* (Pauley Pavilion) 5:00 pm (PT)
April 9 @ UC Merced* (Merced, CA) 6:00 pm (PT)
April 10 @ UC Merced* (Merced, CA) 6:00 pm (PT)
April 12 @ Menlo* (Atherton, CA) 2:00 pm (PT)
April 16 BYU* (Pauley Pavilion) 7:00 pm (PT)
April 18 BYU* (Pauley Pavilion) 5:00 pm (PT)
Apr 22-26 MPSF Tournament (Provo, UT - Smith Fieldhouse)
May 1 NCAA Regionals (TBA)
May 9 NCAA Championships Semifinal (Pauley Pavilion)
May 11 NCAA Championships Final (Pauley Pavilion)
All times Pacific and subject to change
*Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) Matches
^ FPCC - First Point Collegiate Challenge, Phoenix, Ariz.






#1
CAMERON THORNE
MB :: 6-4 :: Sr. Hollywood, Fla. South Broward HS / GCU

#7
ANDREW ROWAN
S :: 6-6 :: Sr. Trabuco Canyon, Calif. J Serra HS

#15
CHRISTOPHER HERSH
MB :: 6-9 :: R-Jr. Cupertino, Calif. St. Francis HS

#28
CHRISTOPHER CONNELLY
L :: 5-9 :: R-Jr. Naples, Fla. Gulf Coast HS

#2
JAIDIN RUSELL
Opp :: 6-5 :: Jr. Newton, Mass. Newton South HS

#8
MICAH WONG DIALLO
MB :: 6-9 :: Jr. Los Angeles, Calif. L.A. Marshall HS

#19
DAVID DECKER
Opp :: 6-9 :: R-Jr. Winston-Salem, N.C. Cardinal Gibbons HS

JOHN HAWKS Head Coach 2nd Season at UCLA

#3
LUCA CURCI
OH :: 6-3 :: Jr. Newport Beach, Calif. Newport Harbor HS

#9 TRENT TALIAFERRO
S :: 6-11 :: So. Redondo Beach, Calif. Mira Costa HS

#20
GRAYSON BRADFORD
OH :: 6-10 :: Fr. Manhattan Beach, Calif. Mira Costa HS

#4
BROGAN GLENN
L :: 6-0 :: Fr. Costa Mesa, Calif. Corona Del Mar HS

#10
FILIPPOS CHRYSOTOMOU
OH :: 6-6 :: Fr. Larnaca, Cyprus Livadia HS (Cyprus)

#21
ZACH RAMA
OH :: 6-8 :: Sr. Phoenix, Ariz. Sandra Day O’Connor HS

#5
CALEB SAPP
Opp :: 6-8 :: So. Upland, Calif. Claremont HS

#12
SEAN KELLY
OH :: 6-7 :: So. Manhattan Beach, Calif Loyola HS

#23
RAFAEL URBINA
S :: 6-4 :: Fr. Broomfield, Colo. Legacy HS

#6
SPENCER GRAVES
MB :: 6-5 :: So. Pacific Palisades, Calif. Loyola HS

#13
MATTHEW THORNTON
L :: 6-1 :: Jr. Dana Point, Calif. Mater Dei

#24
MAREK TURNER
OH :: 6-3 :: Fr. Long Beach, Calif. Woodrow Wilson HS HS

Men’s Volleyball Coaching and Support Staff
Head Coach: John Hawks
Assistant: Milan Zarkovic
Assistant: Lindsay Brown
Assistant: Alex Knight
Dir. of Operations: / Technical Coord: AJ Ruttenberg
Statistician: Rob Chai
Athletic Trainer: David Wacker
Assoc. Director of Athletic Performance: Dawn Malone
Nutrition: Brittany Bowman
Equipment: Nathan Reft
Academic Coordinator: Linda Lassiter
Alumni Relations: Nancy Ishiki


• Fourth season as a collegiate head coach
• Second season as UCLA Men’s Volleyball Head Coach
• Boasts overall record of 62-24 (.721 winning percantage)
• 22-7 record as UCLA head coach
• Coached 10 All-America selections as head coach (4 at UCLA, 6 at Loyola Chicago)
• Named Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association Coach of the Year in 2023
•Won bronze medal as head coach of U21 USA Men’s Volleyball at FIVB World Championships in China
• Served as lead UCLA assistant coach from 2015-22
Year Overall Conf. Record/Finish Final Ranking 2023 (Loyola Chicago) 21-7 11-3, 2nd N/A 2024 (Loyola Chicago) 19-10 12-4, 2nd N/A 2025 (UCLA) 22-7 10-2, 1st 2nd Totals 62-24 (.721)

John Hawks enters his second season in charge of the UCLA men’s volleyball program in 2026. Hawks, who was an assistant coach for UCLA from 2015-22 was named the third head coach in UCLA men’s volleyball history on Friday, October 11, 2024.
In his first season in charge in 2025, Hawks led the Bruins to a third-straight NCAA title match, coached four All-Americans, and posted his highest win total in a single season as a head coach after pacing UCLA to 22 wins. Under Hawk’s tutelage, Cooper Robinson was named MPSF Player of the Year and a first-team All-American. Andrew Rowan earned his third AVCA firstteam All-America honors, Cameron Thorne claimed AVCA First-team All-America accolades, and Zach Rama earned a spot on the AVCA second-team All-America list.
Hawks recorded his first win as head coach of the program on January 10, as the Bruins took down St. Francis in straight sets. He then won his first NCAA Tournament match over Belmont Abbey on May 8, another three-set sweep. He then earned his first NCAA National Collegiate title appearance after leading the Bruins to a 3-1 win over Hawai’i in the semifinals.
Under his leadership, the Bruins had four All-Americans in 2025, five MPSF honorees, and nine Big Ten Spring Academic honor roll members. On the court, Cameron Thorne was also named the Ryan Millar award winner as the nation’s best middle attacker, and earned the Dain Blanton Diversity Award.
Hawks served as the head coach of the U21 USA National Team during the summer of 2025, and won a bronze medal at the U21 World Championships in China. The result was the first medal finish for the USA U21 program all-time.
Prior to taking the role at UCLA, Hawks spent two seasons at Loyola Chicago. In two seasons as head coach of Loyola Chicago, he posted a 40-17 record (.702 winning percentage), earned Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association (MIVA) Coach of the Year honors in 2023, and coached six All-Americans.
Loyola Chicago finished with a 19-10 overall record and a 12-4 record in MIVA play in 2024. The Ramblers ended the season with the third-highest hitting percentage in the country (.350), swept 12 teams, and enjoyed a seven-match winning streak from Feb. 24 to March 21. Several Loyola players received individual honors in 2024, including MIVA Player of the Year and AVCA First-Team All-American Parker Van Buren and MIVA and AVCA Newcomer of the Year Daniel Fabikovic.
In his first season in charge of the program in 2023, Hawks directed Loyola to a 21-7 (11-3 MIVA) record and a share of the MIVA regular season title, its first since 2018. Six Ramblers were named to All-MIVA teams, the most in the conference, and three earned All-America accolades.
Prior to joining Loyola Chicago, Hawks spent seven seasons (2015-22) as an assistant coach at UCLA and posted a 134-54 (.713) overall record during that time. Hawks recruited and helped develop five AVCA All-America selections and a Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) Player of the Year in Miles Partain.
Hawks was honored as the 2022 AVCA National Assistant Coach of the Year after he helped lead the Bruins to the top attack percentage in the nation (.374) and a nine-week stay atop the AVCA Coaches Poll. During 2022, the Bruins advanced to the NCAA semifinals and captured the MPSF regular season title for the first time since 1998. Partain became UCLA’s first winner of the MPSF Player of the Year Award since 2000 and was also one of three finalists for the Lloy Ball Award as the nation’s top setter. Also that year, Kevin Kobrine was a finalist for the Bryan Ivie Award as the country’s best opposite, and Merrick McHenry was a finalist for the Ryan Millar Award as the nation’s top middle attacker. Partain, McHenry and Ethan Champlin were firstteam All-America selections.
In 2018, UCLA advanced to the national championship match and recorded 26 wins. Daenan Gyimah repeated as the Ryan Millar Award as the nation’s top middle attacker and became a three-time first-team All-American.
While coaching at UCLA, Hawks also served as the head coach of the U.S. National Men’s Volleyball Team in the summer of 2019, leading the team to a second-place finish at the NORCECA Continental Championships. He was also on the U.S. coaching staff for two Pan American Cup gold medals and a bronze medal at the World University Games. Hawks coached three Bruins who went on to become Olympians – Micah Ma’a and Partain in 2024 and Mitch Stahl in 2020.
Hawks also held assistant coach positions at Long Beach State (2009-11), USC (2007-08) and UC Irvine (2003-06). During his time in Long Beach, the Beach made the NCAA tournament each year and had 10 All-Mountain Pacific Sports Federation selections and four AVCA AllAmerica picks. During his four seasons at UC Irvine, the Anteaters won 70 matches (more than the program’s first 11 years combined) and qualified for the MPSF tournament three times. He was on the sidelines during the 2006 campaign when UCI spent eight weeks ranked No. 1 in the nation, won the program’s first conference title, led the nation in wins with 27, and reached the national semifinals. Hawks helped to recruit Anteater classes that went on to win two NCAA Championships.
Prior to his first stint at UCLA, Hawks spent four years in Cleveland, Ohio, where he acted as Director of Volleyball for SPIRE Institute, a boarding school designed to blend athletics and academics at the highest level. He also served as head coach at The Academy for Volleyball, where his 17 Open team won the 2015 AAU Girls’ National Championship. He began his college coaching career as an assistant coach at Grossmont College from 1995-97. Hawks played at Grossmont College and San Diego State. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Management from the University of Phoenix.
Hawks and his wife Julianne have two daughters, Giavanna and Gabriella.

Milan Zarkovic is in his first season as Associate Head Coach of the UCLA men’s volleyball program in 2026.
Zarkovic comes to Westwood after spending the last 12 seasons with the Hawai’i men’s volleyball program, where he helped lead the Rainbow Warriors to back-to-back National Championships in 2021 and 2022, as well as runner-up finishes in 2019 and 2023.
“We are thrilled to welcome Milan Zarkovic as our new associate head coach for UCLA Men’s Volleyball,” head coach John Hawks said. “Milan’s extensive experience internationally and domestically, as well as his passion for the game, will be invaluable to our program. Milan has a proven track record of developing elite players and fostering a competitive team culture, which aligns perfectly with our championship aspirations. I look forward to working alongside him as we continue to build on our tremendous legacy here at UCLA. Welcome to Westwood, Milan!”
While at Hawai’i, Zarkovic led the Rainbow Warriors to seven appearances in the NCAA tournament, four national title game appearances, and two NCAA titles. During his time in Manoa, UH accumulated a better than 75% winning percentage and recorded five of the winningest records in program history. Zarkovic was named the AVCA Assistant Coach of the Year in 2020 and 2023.
“I am very excited for the opportunity to work for one of the best university institutions in the world,” Zarkovic said. “I’ve had a long-standing volleyball relationship with John Hawks, and that will be our strength moving forward at UCLA. I’m heading to California as a man who took great pride in what I did in Hawaii, and I feel like I left them in great shape. I’d like to also add a big thank you to John Hawks, Gavin Crew and their administration for all your efforts to bring me to the Bruin family!”
Zarkovic’s accolades extend past the collegiate ranks, as he also has an extensive head coaching history in Europe. Zarkovic has more than a decade of national team coaching experience, including serving as head coach of Belarus’ Senior National Team from 2011-12. He served as head coach of the Serbian Junior National Team (formerly Yugoslavia and Serbia & Montenegro) from 2001-13, leading the team to a bronze medal at the European Junior Championships in 2010 and a bronze medal at the World Junior Championships in 2011.
In all, Zarkovic helped the Serbian youth teams capture five gold medals at the Balkan Championships and three runner-up finishes. He also led his teams to the World Junior Championships three times, including a third-place finish in 2011 in Brazil and seventh-place finishes in 2003 in Iran and 2005 in India. Under his guidance, Serbia moved up from a No. 28 FIVB ranking in 2003 to No. 1 in 2010. In addition, he directed the Serbian squad which captured gold medals at the 2009 and 2011 World Youth Championships. The 2009 squad also won gold at the European Youth Championships, while the 2011 team won silver.
Zarkovic has also coached in the professional ranks for over 20 years at nine different clubs, including a stint with Al Ain in the UAE from 2012 to 2013. At each stop, Zarkovic led his team to a championship. He began his coaching career in 1990 with VC “Anorthosis” (Limassol), then from 1992-97, he coached in VC “Enosis Paralimni” before moving to VC “Pafiakos Silogos Athlopaidion” from 1997-2000. During this time, he led his clubs to several championships and cup titles.
In 2000, Zarkovic returned to Serbia as coach of VC “Partizan” (Belgrade). For the next four seasons, he remained with the club and won both the Championship and Cup titles. In 2004, he coached VC “CSS Sfax” (Tunisia), where he managed to win both the championship and cup titles again. In 2007, he returned to “Partizan” where he coached until 2011. During the 2010-11 season, he won yet another Championship title.
Zarkovic’s Resume
NCAA Accolades
2x NCAA Champion with Hawai’i (2021, 2022)
2x AVA Assistant Coach of the Year with Hawai’i (2020, 2023)
National Team Experience
Belarus Senior National Team; Head Coach (2011-12)
Serbia Junior National Team; Head Coach (2006-13)
Serbia and Montenegro Junior National Team; Head Coach (2003-06)
Yugoslavia Junior National Team; Head Coach (2001-03)
Coaching Experience
Hawai’i, Associate Coach (2016-24)
Hawai’i, Assistant Coach (2014-15)
Al Ain UAE; Head Coach (2012-13)
Stroitel Minsk; Head Coach (2011-12)
Partizan Belgrade Serbia; Head Coach (2007-11)
Saidia Tunis; Head Coach (2007)
CSS Sfax Tunis; Head Coach (2004-06)
Partizan Belgrade Serbia Montenegro; Head Coach (2000-04)
Pafiakos Silogos Athlopaidion; Head Coach (1997-2000)
Enosis Paralimni Cyprus; Head Coach (1992-97)
Anorthosis Limassol Cyprus; Head Coach (1990-92)

Alex Knight is in his first year as an assistant coach with the UCLA men’s volleyball program in 2026.
Knight returns to Westwood after concluding his professional playing career in Germany in 2025 with SWD Powervolleys Düren in the German Bundesliga. He also played for the Bruins and received both his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from UCLA, where he helped the Bruins win national titles in 2023 and 2024.
“We are thrilled to welcome Alex back home to Westwood,” head coach John Hawks said. “Alex brings a winning pedigree both from his time at UCLA where he was an AVCA All-American and a two-time national champion, and from his professional playing days. Alex is a Bruin through and through, and I can’t wait to see the impact he will make on the young men in our program.”
Knight had a successful season in Germany in 2025, helping his club team to the finals of the German Cup, and a sixth-place finish in the league standings at the end of the season. He returns to Westwood having made appearances in 109 matches for the Bruins between 2020 and 2024.
“I am so excited to be coming back home to UCLA,” Knight said. “My time as a studentathlete was a dream come true, but I know that there is unfinished business for me in Westwood. Thank you to Coach Hawks for giving me this opportunity -- I can’t wait to step into this new role and help bring more National Championships home for this program.”
While at UCLA as a player, Knight played in a total of 109 matches, playing both at outside hitter and at libero. While playing primarily at outside hitter, Knight totaled 635 kills over five seasons between 2020 and 2024, with a career-high of 257 kills and a .332 hitting percentage as a redshirt junior in 2023. For his efforts, Knight was named a second-team AVCA All-American and a MPSF first-team selection.
Knight played a key role for the Bruins in both the 2023 and 2024 NCAA National Collegiate title runs. In the 2023 NCAA tournament, Knight recorded 21 kills, including 15 in the final, where the Bruins beat Hawai’i in four sets to claim their 20th national championship. After the tournament, Knight was named the most outstanding player of the tournament.
His role was different during the 2024 title run, as he played primarily at libero down the stretch for the Bruins. Knight finished the year with 89 kills, hit .350 on the year, recorded 70 digs, and played every set of the Bruins’ title run in the NCAA tournament as UCLA captured its 21st national championship.


Lindsay Brown enters her second season as an assistant coach in 2026. She was hired on Friday, November 8, 2024, by head coach John Hawks.
In 2025, Brown helped the Bruins to a third-straight NCAA title match, coached four All-Americans, and helped UCLA post over 20 wins for the third season in a row. Cooper Robinson was named MPSF Player of the Year and a first-team All-American. Additionally, Andrew Rowan earned his third AVCA first-team All-America honors and MPSF first-team acclaim, Cameron Thorne claimed AVCA first-team All-America accolades, and Zach Rama earned a spot on the AVCA second-team All-America list. The Bruins also won the MPSF regular season crown in 2025.
“I am excited to have Lindsay join us on staff here at UCLA,” head coach John Hawks said. “Lindsay brings a high-level of professionalism and expertise with her to Westwood. She is a gifted recruiter and has a unique way of connecting with all of the student-athletes she comes in contact with. We can’t wait to hit the ground running with Lindsay as we gear up for the 2025 season.”
Brown spent last season with Hawks on staff at Loyola Chicago, helping the Ramblers to a 19-10 record, and a 12-4 mark in conference play in 2024. The Ramblers ended the season with the third-highest hitting percentage in the country (.350), swept 12 teams, and enjoyed a seven-match winning streak from Feb. 24 to March 21. Brown helped coach several Loyola players receive individual honors at the end of the 2024 season, including MIVA Player of the Year and AVCA First-Team All-American Parker Van Buren and MIVA and AVCA Newcomer of the Year Daniel Fabikovic.
Prior to her time in Chicago, Brown spent the 2023 season at Princeton where she served as the program’s lead assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. The Tigers advanced to the EIVA Championship finals in 2023 and finished the year ranked 14th nationally while having five players garner All-EIVA honors.
Before heading to Princeton, Brown was the lead assistant coach at Purdue Fort Wayne and was a graduate assistant for men’s volleyball for two years before she was promoted to assistant coach. In 2021, she stepped into the primary coaching while head coach Ryan Perrotte was on leave.
Brown also has experience on the national level, having coached the U.S. Boys U19 National Team in 2022 and 2023. Under Brown’s leadership, the U19 squad would go on to win gold at the 2022 NORCECA Pan American Cup and secure a berth in the 2023 FIVB World Championships in the process. The U.S. would go on to take its best finish ever at the World Championships, placing 4th in Argentina in the summer of 2023.
As a former setter for Sonoma State University, Brown finished her collegiate career as the season and career assist record holder for the Sea Wolves as well as the owner of the career service ace record. Brown was an All-Conference selection three times and was Academic All-Conference four times.
After she finished her time at Sonoma State, she played for Volleyball Club Tirol in Austria and the NorCal Dream Team and Wildfire in the Premier Volleyball League.
Brown’s coaching experience includes a head coaching position for the junior club at Empire Volleyball and assistant coaching position at Sonoma State, Ferris State and Dominican University of California.
Brown earned her degree in general studies with a concentration in sociology from Purdue Fort Wayne in 2017.



Saw action in 28 matches … Ryan Millar Award Winner … Dain Blanton Diversity Award Winner … AVCA First Team All-America selection … MPSF first-team honoree … AVCA Player of the Week (week of Feb. 24, 2025) … Hit .521 on the season with 201 kills and 303 attack attempts (43 errors) … His .521 hitting percentage ranks fifth all-time in single-season hitting percentage … Tallied double-digit kills on six occasions … Had a career-high 17 kills in UCLA’s five set win over No. 3 UC Irvine in Pauley Pavilion on Feb. 22 … Also added 15 sets in the match at UCI Irvine three nights earlier on Feb. 19 in a three-set win over the Anteaters … Defensively tallied a team-high 103 blocks, and 13 solo blocks … His 1.06 blocks per set ranks 10th nationally … Had at least four total blocks or more 16 times … Recorded a career-high seven block assists twice during the 2025 season; at CSUN (Jan. 24) and against Stanford (March 7).
KILLS: 17 vs. UC IrvIne, 2025
ACES: 3 at PePPerdIne, 2025
BLOCKS: 7, vs stanford, 2025
BLOCK SOLOS: 2 vs. UC san d ego, 2025
DIGS: 4 vs. BYU, 2025

Spent two seasons at Grand Canyon University (GCU) ... Was a first-team All-American in 2024, earned second-team MPSF honors, was named to the MPSF All-Tournament team, and made it to the NCAA semifinals with the Lopes ... Led the country in total blocks with 149 in 2024 and in blocks per set with 1,34 ... Hit .530 with 2016 kills on the season ... As for 2023 Thorne had 93 kills and hit .420 in his freshman season .... Totaled 63 blocks on the season over 25 matches and helped the Lopes advance to the MPSF Tournament final and the NCAA Tournament quarterfinals ... Over his two seasons at GCU the Lopes finished 48-13 overall (.787 winning percentage), made the MPSF Tournament finals twice ( one title), and made the NCAA Tournament twice.
Club/High School
Played for 352 elite at the club level and earned AAU All-American honors ... Played for South Broward High School in Hollywood, Florida, earned Broward County Player of the Year honors while in high school.
Personal
Son of Audrey and Anthony Thorne ... Has an older sister, Gloria, and a younger brother, Christian ... Chose UCLA because of “All the opportunities the campus provides both athletically and academically to further my career.” ... Aspires to play volleyball professionally... Greatest athletic thrill prior to UCLA was winning the MPSF Tournament Championship in 2024 with GCU.
/
Did not appear in a match for the Bruins in 2024 ... helped the Bruins earn their second consecutive NCAA title.
2023 Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit ... named two-time All-Scholastic and All-Star ... served as team captain for two seasons ... also played basketball.
Club
Played for Smash Volleyball Club ... USAV Club MVP.
Personal
Son of Jennifer Roser and Roger Russell ... has a brother and sister ... lists his greatest thrill in sports as traveling to Poland and training with some of the world’s best players ... names U.S. Men’s National Team player Taylor Averill as the famous athlete he most admires ... hobbies and interests include anime, public speaking ... can play the ukulele ... interesting in playing pro volleyball and coaching.

6-3 / JUNIoR
oUTSIDe HITTeR
NewpoRT BeACH, CALIF.
NewpoRT HARBoR HS
Saw action in all 29 matches … played at both outside hitter and libero … Started at libero in all but two matches, including the entire NCAA Tournament run … Recorded a .929 service reception percentage, had 509 successful receptions compared to 36 errors … Had nine matches where he was perfect in serve reception … Played at outside hitter in both matches against Vanguard, and tallied a season-high seven kills in the home win over the Lions on March 15 … In the NCAA Tournament he finished with a service reception rate of .950 (38 of 40 successful receptions).
Saw action in 17 matches ... played at outside hitter, libero and was used as a serving sub ... had a best of five kills vs. USC (h) ... three kills in match vs. Grand Canyon ... posted a pair of aces at Pepperdine ... registered a .955 serve reception percentage on
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 7 vs vangaUrd, 2025
ACES: 2 at PePPerdIne, 2024
BLOCKS: 2 at vangaUrd, 2025
DIGS: 8 vs. MorehoUse, 2024

High School
CAREER STATISTICS
6-0 / FReSHMAN
LIBeRo
CoSTA MeSSA, CALIF.
CoRoNA DeL MAR HS
Played boys’ volleyball at Corona Del Mar HS in Newport Beach, California … named to Volleyballmag.com’s Fab 50 list … was named to the All-CIF high school team and earned all-league honors throughout his time at Corona Del Mar.
133 attempts ... had multiple digs in six matches ... high of 8 digs against Morehouse ... six digs against Ohio State in Texas ... saw brief action in NCAA matches against Fort Valley State (1 kill) and UC Irvine... Helped UCLA earn its second consecutive NCAA title in 2024.
Named the 2023 VolleyballMag.com Boys’ High School Player of the Year ... selected to the firstteam 2023 VolleyballMag.com Boys’ HS All-America team ... named to 2023 Volleybalmag.com Fab 50 recruit list ... AVCA first-team High School All-America team selection ... helped lead his high school team to back-to-back CIF-SS Division I titles ... had 17 kills in the CIF Championship Match win ... as a senior, he was named the CIF-SS Division I Co-Player of the Year and the Orange County Register Player of the Year ... finished his high school career with 495 kills and hit .360 with 59 blocks and 131 digs.
Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club.
Named to the U18 U.S. Training Series roster.
Son of Anthony and Erin Curci ... has one sister ... dad was a member of the 1989 NCAA men’s volleyball championship team at UCLA ... his greatest athletic thrill to date is winning the CIF volleyball championship ... hobbies include basketball, soccer and playing FIFA ... lists the NBA’s Scoot Henderson as the famous athlete he most admires ... interested in a career in business.
Club
Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club and was named an AAU All-American and won the AAU Championship in 2025.
Personal
Son of Mary and Daniel Glenn … Has an older brother, Jaden, and two older sisters, Hailey and Tegan … Sister Hailey also attended UCLA … Chose UCLA because of its amazing athletic facilities, great coaching staff, and strong university academics ... In his free time enjoys going to the beach and playing basketball.

2025
Did not appear in a match in 2025.
High School
6-8 / SopHoMoRe oppoSITe
UpLAND, CALIF. CLAReMoNT HS
U.S. Boys’ U19 National Team ... Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club which captured first-place at the 2023 AAU Nationals 17s Open and second-place at the 2022 AAU Nationals 16s Open.
Was a four-year varsity letter winner and was named to the first-team Baseline League squad the past two seasons ... in 2022 he recorded over 500 kills, 44 aces and 45 blocks for Claremont HS... Sapp was selected for the 2022-23 National Training and Development program with the

2025
6-5 / JUNIoR
MIDDLe BLoCKeR
pACIFIC pALISADeS, CALIF. LoyoLA HS
Made appearances in 10 matches in 2025, and had one start at Ohio State … Utilized mostly as a serving sub throughout the year … Recorded three aces on the year, had one vs, Ohio State (Jan. 18), one vs. UC San Diego (Jan. 23), and one at CSUN (Jan. 24).
2024
Did not see match action... helped the Bruins earn their second consecutive NCAA title.
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 1 at vangaUrd, 2025
ACES: 1, 3x, last at CsUn, 2025
DIGS: 1 vs vangaUrd, 2025
STATISTICS
Helped lead Loyola HS to a 29-2 record and the CIF regional crown with wins over Scripps Ranch, Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor ... AVCA first-team High School All-America team selection ... named to the second-team VolleyballMag.com 2023 Boys’ HS All-America team ... 2023 Volleyball Mag Fab 50 Player ... team captain for 2023 AVCA High School National Champions ... hit over .600 his senior season.
USA Volleyball
USA Volleyball U21 Training Series player.
Club
Played for Manhattan Beach Surf Volleyball Club ... 2023 AAU 18 Open National Champions ... 2023 volleyballmag.com second-team All-America selection.
Personal
Son of Helen and Scott Graves ... has one older brother ... his parents each attended UCLA ... lists his biggest athletic thrill to date as winning the AAU national championship ... the famous athlete he most admires is Kobe Bryant ... hobbies include music, golf and surfing ... able to play three musical instruments ... interested in a career in business.

6-6 /
Saw action in 27 matches ... AVCA first-team All-America selection ... MPSF first-team ... led the Bruin offense to a .364 hitting percentage, which was the second best nationally … his 10.08 assists per set mark was tops in the MPSF and 13th nationally … Directed the Bruins offense to a hitting percentage of .300 or better 25 times, and .400 or better 11 times … paced the Bruins offense to a season-high .535 hitting percentage in a four set win at UC Santa Barbara on Feb. 28 … Had 33 aces on the year, good for second on the team … Had at least one kill in 21 matches, and had a season-high five kills against BYU on April 12 … Had multiple aces in six different matches and tallied a season-high three aces in both matches against BYU and in UCLA’s five set win at home over USC on April 17 … Had 30 or more assists in 23 matches, had 40 or more assists in 12 matches, and had 50 or more assists on two occasions … In UCLA’s five-set win over BYU on April 11, had a season-high 44 assists … Had 109 digs on the year with a season-high 10 at Pepperdine on March 29.
Saw action in 30 matches ... AVCA first-team All-America selection ... MPSF first-team ... named to the NCAA Championship all-tournament team ... directed the Bruin offense to a .372 hitting percentage, which led the nation ... his 10.06 set assists mark ranked 10th in the NCAA and second in MPSF ... had team-high 40 aces and rated 8th in the MPSF with 0.35 aces per set average ... had at least one kill in 26 of 30 matches, including a season-high five kills in matches against Grand Canyon and UCI ... had multiple aces in 12 contests with a high of 6 at Lewis ... at least four digs in 19 matches ... multiple blocks in 20 matches with a high of 7.0 vs. UC Santa Barbara ... named Off the Block’s National Setter of Week after team hit combined .350 in a pair of wins over GCU ... has at least one kill in 26 matches ... OTB’s National Setter of Week after leading team to combined .425 percentage in the two regular season USC match wins.
AVCA Newcomer of the Year (first Bruin since Brandon Taliaferro in 1997 to earn the award) and MPSF Freshman of the Year ... AVCA first-team All-America selection and first-team All-MPSF pick ... led all MPSF players with 50 aces on the season ... had multiple aces in 17 matches with a best of 6 vs. UCSD ... had a least one ace in 20 of the final 22 matches of the season ... ranked 12th in the nation in aces per set (0.46) and ninth in set assist average (10.14) ... saw action in all 33 matches, with 28 starts ... set the team to at least a .400 hitting percentage in 14 matches ... UCLA led the nation in hitting percentage (.382) ... registered multiple blocks in 17 contests ... named Off the Block’s Setter of the Week for his play on the trip to Grand Canyon when the team hit over .400 in both matches ... AVCA National Player of the Week for his outstanding play in two regular season wins over Long Beach (team hit a season-best .551 in one match) ... finalist for the Lloy Ball Award presented to the nation’s top setter.
Played boys’ volleyball at J Serra Catholic HS in San Juan Capistrano ... as a senior, he hit .300 with 396 kills, 46 aces and 44 total blocks ... named to the top five of Volleyballmag.com’s Fab 50 recruit list ... was named to the 2021 USA Youth National Team ... also named to the USA Collegiate National Training team as a high school junior ... widely considered to be the top setter in the recruiting class.
Named the tournament’s best setter after helping the U.S. win gold at the 2023 Pan Am Cup Final Six in Alberta, Edmonton ... ... played for the U.S. in the 2023 U21 FIVB World Championships (U.S. finished 13th) ... helped lead the U.S. Men’s U21 National Team to the gold medal at the Pan American Cup competition in Cuba in the summer of 2022 ... selected Best Setter, Best Server and MVP by the coaches at the 2022 Pan American Cup.
Played for OCVC Volleyball Club.
Son of Angela and Chuck Rowan ... has two brothers, Christopher and Shawn, and three sisters, Teresa, Katie and Veronica ... hobbies include playing pickup basketball and going to the beach
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 5, 4x, last vs. BYU, 2025
ACES: 6, 2x, at lew s, 2024
BLOCKS: 9 vs. UC santa BarBara, 2024
BLOCK SOLOS: 4 vs long BeaCh st., 2023
DIGS: 10, 2x, last at PePPerd ne, 2025

6-9 / JUNIoR
MIDDLe BLoCKeR
LoS ANGeLeS, CALIF.
JoHN MARSHALL HS
Saw action in five matches in 2025 … Started twice on the year in UCLA’s sweeps of UC San Diego on Jan. 23 and at Vanguard on March 13 … Recorded a season-high four kills in UCLA’s MPSF semifinal match at Pepperdine on April 25 … Recorded his first service ace in UCLA’s win at Vanguard … Tallied four blocks in UCLA’s match at Vanguard … Recorded two block assists and a solo block in UCLA’s match against Pepperdine in the MPSF tournament semifinals.
Saw action against Morehouse and totaled six kills and four blocks ... helped te Bruins earn their second conescutive NCAA titles.
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 6, vs. MorehoUse, 2024
aCes: 1 at vangaUrd, 2025
BloCKs: 4, 2x, last vs vangaUrd, 2025
dIgs: 1, 3x, last at vangaUrd, 2025

CAREER STATISTICS
2023 Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit ... hit .356 his senior season at John Marshall HS with 189 kills and 22 total blocks in his first year on the volleyball team ... played four seasons of basketball ... All-City first-team selection ... Fab 50 recruit according to volleyballmag.com ... named AllNorthern League ... attended Loyola HS his freshman year before transferring to John Marshall HS. Club
Played for So Cal Legends Volleyball Club ... earned a bronze medal in the Chi-Town Tournament.
Earned a silver medal playing for the U.S. 2023 Men’s U21 Pan American Cup team ... was selected by USA Volleyball to the training roster for the 2023 FIVB Men’s U21 World Championship.
Son of Cindy Wong ... has a younger brother and sister ... lists his biggest sports thrill to date as representing Team USA in the Pan American Cup in Cuba ... the famous athletes he most admires are Kobe Bryant and Brian Scalabrini ... hobbies include watching anime, playing video games, listening to music and playing basketball.
6-9 / SopHoMoRe
SeTTeR
SAN CLeMeNTe, CALIF. J SeRRA HS
Played in 10 matches and made three starts during the 2025 season … Made his first collegiate start in UCLA’s four set win over Stanford on March 6, where he tallied a season-high 47 assists and directed the Bruins offense to a .416 hitting percentage … Recorded two kills on the year … Added 16 digs and had eight block assists throughout the season … Had a season-high three service aces in UCLA’s win over Stanford on March 6.
Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club where he earned a plethora of awards and accolades ... While with the Balboa Bay Club earned MVP at the AAU Boy’s Junior Nationals event in 2024, and
KILLS: 1, 2x, last vs stanford, 2025
aCes: 3 vs stanford, 2025
BloCKs: 4 vs stanford, 2025
dIgs: 5 vs stanford, 2025
earned the Gold Medal with his squad ... In 2023 while playing for the Balboa Bay U17 team he earned a spot on the All-Tournament team at the AAU Boy’s Junior Nationals event and won the gold medal ... Played for 949 Athletics Volleyball Club during the 2021-22 season and earned All-American honors at AAU Nationals in Orlando, Florida (June 27-30, 2022), and his team earned the Bronze Medal at AAU Nationals in Orlando ... He also earned All-Tournament honors at the MLK Invitational (Jan. 15-17, 2021)
Was selected to participate on the 2024 US Men’s U21 National Team that earned the Gold Medal in the NORCECA U21 Continental Championships in Nogales, Mexico Summer 2024 ... Selected to participate on the 2023 US Boy’s U19 National Team that got 4th Place – U19 World Championship in San Juan Argentina ... Earned a spot on the U19 USA Volleyball squad which earned the Gold Medal at the NORECA U19 Continental Championships in Guatemala in March of 2023 ... Was also selected by USA Volleyball to the 2022 U.S. Men’s U19 National Training Team that trained in Anaheim from May 11-May 20th in preparation for 2022 Pan-Am Cup in Guatemala City
Son of Brandon and Heidi Taliaferro... His father Brandon is a current assistant coach and earned two NCAA titles during his playing days in Westwood ... Chose UCLA Because of the great coaches, great teammates, great history, and great competition.

Club
6-6 / FReSHMAN
oUTSIDe HITTeR
LARNACA, CypRUS
LIvADIA HS (CypRUS)
Recorded a decorated club career in his native Cyprus before heading to UCLA … Earned four national championships with his club team, Leontas Livadion, and was named best Cypriot volleyball teenager on four separate occasions.

2025
6-7 / SopHoMoRe
oUTSIDe HITTeR
MANHATTAN BeACH, CALIF.
LoyoLA HS
Played in 24 matches, making 14 starts in 2025 … Earned MPSF honorable mention and allfreshman team honors … Recorded 142 kills on 316 swings to hit .323 on the season … His hitting percentage of .323 put him 27th nationally for the year … Recorded 17 service aces, 35 total blocks (two solo blocks, 33 block assists) and 67 digs … Recorded double digit kills in nine matches, and had a season-high 13 kills three times in 2025, including in the NCAA Semifinal three set win over Hawai’i … Had 13 kills in UCLA’s five-set win over USC on April 17 … Hit a season-high .615 and had eight kills in UCLA’s three set win over Pepperdine on March 27 … Recorded 17 service aces on the year, and had a season-high three service aces against Pepperdine in the MPSF semifinals on April 25 … Recorded 67 digs on the year and had a season-high eight digs twice, at GCU on April 5, and vs. Hawai’i on May 10 in the NCAA
KILLS: 13, 3x, last vs hawaII, 2025
ACES: 3 vs PePPerdIne, 2025
BLOCKS: 4 vs. PePPerdIne, 2025
BLOCK SOLOS: 1, 2x, last vs. PePPerdIne, 2025
DIGS: 8 vs hawaII, 2025
Son of Marios and Sofia Kourti Chrysostomou … Has a brother named Stefanos … Enjoys playing the drums and drawing … Chose UCLA because it combines the best in athletics and academics.
semifinal … Recorded 35 blocks on the year (two solo blocks, 33 block assists) and had a season-high four block assists in the Bruins five-set win over BYU on April 11.
Kelly was named the 2023 CIF Div. I Player of the Year at Loyola High School which won the HS National Championship ... Loyola also captured the 2023 CIF State Championship ... Kelly is a three-time volleyballmag.com Top 25 Underclassman selection ... He represented the U.S. and was the team captain at the U19 FIVB World Championships where the team recorded a best-ever finish of fourth ... Kelly totaled 17 kills in the bronze medal match ... He also helped the U.S. earn the Gold Medal at the 2023 NORCECA Pan Am Games and was named Best Spiker ... In 2022, he was the U19 captain and a gold medalist at the Pan Am Games where he was named MVP and Best Spiker ... Kelly plays club volleyball for MB Surf which captured the gold medal at the 2023 AAU Boys’ Nationals 18 Open ... He was also a gold medalist and MVP at the 2023 SoCal Cup 18 Open.

Prior to UCLA
6-1 / JUNIoR
LIBeRo
DANA poINT, CALIF.
MATeR DeI
Spent two seasons at GCU, where he helped the Lopes advance to the NCAA semifinals in 2023 ... As a sophomore in 2025, he was named to the MPSF All-Academic team ... Played in a total of 48 matches across two seasons for the Lopes ... In 2025 appeared in 25 matches, posted 71 digs and 14 assists over 81 sets played ... Had a single-match high of eight digs vs BYU on March 22, 2025 ... AS a freshman in 2024 helped the Lopes win the MPSF Tournament and reach the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament ... Appeared in 23 matches and recorded a season-high 10 digs against NJIT and Concordia on March 15 and 21.

2025
6-9 / ReDSHIRT JUNIoR
MIDDLe BLoCKeR
CUpeRTINo, CALIF. ST. FRANCIS HS
Recorded his first match action as a Bruin, made four appearances and made one start … Recorded his first start in UCLA’s sweep of Vanguard on March 15 … Had three kills and five blocks in the win over Vanguard on March 15 … Used as a serving sub in three other matches.
2024
Did not see match action in his second season in the program ... Helped the Bruins earn a
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 3 vs vangaUrd, 2025
BLOCKS: 5 vs vangaUrd, 2025
BLOCK SOLOS: 2 vs vangaUrd, 2025
DIGS: 1, 2x, last vs vangaUrd, 2025
High School
Played high school volleyball at Mater Dei High School and played club volleyball for the 949 Volleyball Club.
Personal
Son of Mary Ann and Tim Thornton ... Has a brother Luke, and a sister, Adrianna ... Chose UCLA because of the amazing blend of academics and the elite volleyball program ... Loves to surf, skateboard and snowboard in his free time.
second consecutive NCAA title.
2023
Did not see match action in his first season in the program ... Helped the Bruins earn the NCAA title.
High School
Attended St. Francis High School his last two years after beginning at Cupertino HS ... selected a Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit.
Club
USA Volleyball All-Tournament selection in 2022 ... SoCal Cup All-Tournament 2021.
Personal
Son of Karen and Eric Hersh ... has two older siblings, Alexander and Brayden ... lists Lamelo Ball, Lonzo Ball and Kerri Walsh Jennings as the famous athletes he most admires ... loves playing beach volleyball, golf and listening to music in his spare time ... member of the marching band and symphonic band.
CAREER STATISTICS - UPDATE

2025
6-9 / ReDSHIRT JUNIoR oppoSITe wINSToN-SALeM, N.C.
CARDINAL GIBBoNS HS
Saw action in 15 matches, making four starts … Recorded 53 kills on the year and had a hitting percentage of .311 … Tallied six service aces on the year and added 16 blocks (1 solo block, 15 block assists) … Recorded double-digit kills twice at Ohio State (Feb. 1), and at UC Santa Barbara (Feb. 28) … Tallied a season-high 11 kills in the match at Ohio State where he also added a service ace, five digs and two block assists … Recorded 10 kills and hit .500 for the match in UCLA’s three set win at UC Santa Barbara, where he also had five digs and two block assists. 2024
Saw action in five matches ... had a season-high three kills vs. Morehouse ... recorded an ace
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 11 at ohIo st., 2025
ACES: 2 vs Penn st., 2025
BLOCKS: 3 vs. Penn st., 2025
BLOCK SOLOS: 1 vs stanford, 2025
DIGS: 5 at UC santa BarBara, 2025

in a win over Fort Valley State ... had two blocks vs. Morehouse ... also saw action in matches versus Ohio State, Penn State and UC Santa Barbara.
2023
Did not see match action in his first season in the program.
Played his senior season of volleyball for one of Florida’s top high school programs at Cardinal Gibbons HS ... Had over 500 total attacks and 253 kills to go along with 85 aces and 59 total blocks as a senior ... also lettered in tennis at No. 1 doubles and No. 2 singles ... played center on the basketball team ... named All-Broward County boy’s volleyball first team ... listed on VolleyballMag.com’s Boys 25 Underclassmen to Watch
Played for Ocean Bay Volleyball Club.
Son of Benjamin and Lauren Decker ... has three sisters - Kaitlin, Eliabeth and Charlotte ... his biggest thrill in sports to date has been going to the state volleyball semifinals as a senior before a packed gym ... his favorite athlete is Kobe Bryant ... hobbies include snowboarding, surfing, watching movies, spending time with family and friends, playing beach volleyball, basketball, tennis, golf and card games ... interested in becoming an engineer ... named to the UCLA Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Winter 2023 and Fall 2022.
CAREER STATISTICS - UPDATE
6-10 / FReSHMAN
oUTSIDe HITTeR
MANHATTAN BeACH, CALIF.
MIRA CoSTA HS
Played at Mira Costa High School as a senior in 2025 where he was named an All-American and AVCA Boys High School Player of the Year in 2025 … Was named first team All-CIF and the Bay League MVP in 2025 … Helped lead Mira Costa to a 37-2 overall record in 2025, a 20-0 home record, and the CIF Division 1 state championship ... named to Volleyballmag.com’s Fab 50 list ... Also named All-American in 2024 and 2022 at Crespi high school in 2024 and Royal HS as a freshman in 2022.
Club
Played club volleyball for Manhattan Beach Surf ... Took part in the U21 training camp in Anaheim during the summer of 2025.
Personal
Son of Sara and Lee Bradford … Has an older sister Carissa and an older brother Derek, as well as a younger sister Brooke … Chose UCLA because of its perfect combination of athletics and academics … Enjoys camping, snowboarding, and riding his bike.

2025
6-8 / SeNIoR
oUTSIDe HITTeR
pHoeNIx, ARIz.
SANDRA DAy o’CoNNoR HS
Earned second team AVCA All-America honors … Named first team MPSF All-Conference honors … Saw action in 27 matches and made 27 starts … Played at both outside hitter and opposite throughout the year … Tallied the second most kills on the squad with 319 kills and hit .318 on the year … Added 99 digs, 32 service aces, and 60 blocks (5 solo blocks, 55 block assists) on the year … Recorded double-digit kills in 20 of 27 appearances throughout the season … Had seven matches with 15 or more kills … Recorded a season-high 21 kills in UCLA’s four-set match against Ohio State on Jan. 18 … Had a 10-match streak of double-digit kills dating from April 4 to May 10 when UCLA took down Hawai’i in the NCAA semifinal match … Had a season-high five service aces in UCLA’s four-set win over UC San Diego on Jan. 23 … Recorded 12 kills and a season-high five blocks in UCLA’s four set win over BYU on April 12.
Saw action in 25 matches with five starts (Morehouse, Lewis, Pepperdine, BYU, BYU) ... had five double-digit kill matches with a season-high of 21 at BYU ... had 16 kills in win over USC and 14 in the MPSF Championship match against Grand Canyon ... had season-high three aces in matches against Morehouse and UC Irvine ... season-high 10 digs in win over UC Irvine ... season-high six blocks in win at Lewis. ... also registered 12 kills at Pepperdine and 10 against Morehouse.
Named to All-MPSF All-Freshman Team ... saw action in 18 matches with four starts (George Mason, CUI, Purdue Ft. Wayne, Pepperdine) ... recorded five double-digit kill matches vs. George Mason (10), CUI (11), Purdue Fort Wayne (12), at Hawai’i (12), Pepperdine (12) ... recorded a season-best of three aces in a win at CUI ... credited with season-best seven digs and four blocks in win over Pepperdine ... saw his first action at CSUN in January.
Named to the top five of Volleyballmag.com’s Fab 50 list ... Played volleyball at Sandra Day O’Connor HS in Phoenix ... as a senior, his team was unbeaten and considered one of the top teams in the nation ... 2022 6A State Volleyball Champs ... named the Arizona Player of the Year in 2021 ... named to the 2021 USA Youth National team.
Member of the U.S. team which won gold at the 2023 Pan Am Cup Final Six in Alberta, Edmonton ... played for the U.S. in the 2023 FIVB U21 World Championships (U.S. finished 13th) and had a high of 18 kills vs. Czechia in a pool play match ... helped lead the U.S. Men’s U21 National Team to the gold medal at the Pan American Cup competition in Cuba in the summer of 2022 ... selected Best Attacker by the coaches at the 2022 Pan American Cup.
Played for Arizona Fear Volleyball Club.
Son of Shoni and Rick Rama ... has two sisters, Piper and Shea ... hobbies include playing basketball and video games ... his favorite athlete is the NBA’s Paul George.
UCLA CAREER HIGHS
KILLS: 21, last at BYU, 2024
ACES: 3 at ConCordIa, Irv ne, 2023
BLOCK ASSISTS: 3 vs. PePPerdIne, 2023
DIGS: 10 vs. UC IrvIne, 2023

CAREER STATISTICS
6-4 / FReSHMAN
SeTTeR BRooMFIeLD, CoLo.
LeGACy HS
Had a decorated high school career before coming to UCLA from Legacy High School in Broomfield, Colorado, in the fall of 2025 … Was a two-time All-State first team selection in 2024 and 2025, a first-team All-Conference selection in 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 … Earned setter of the conference honors in 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 … Was named 20205 Colorado High School Player of the Year.
Played for both Bay to Bay volleyball club and Lobos volleyball club ... Was a part of the Team USA roster that took part in the U-19 2024 NORCECA Continental Championships, where he earned a gold medal with Team USA and was named best setter of the tournament … Also represented the United States at the 2025 U19 World Championships held in Uzbekistan.
Son of Laura and Jorge Urbina … His mother Lauren played division one volleyball at the University of Rhode Island where she was named to the athletics hall of fame and is the only player in URI volleyball history with at least 1,000 kills, 1,000 digs, and 490 total blocks ... Has a brother Marcelo and a sister Alexandra … Decided to attend UCLA because of the amazing program history men’s volleyball has, the national team tenure and winning history this program contains, and the elite academics the school provides ... Enjoys golfing, fishing, traveling with his family.

High School
6-3 / FReSHMAN
oUTSIDe HITTeR
LoNG BeACH, CALIF. wooDRow wILSoN HS
Played four year at Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, California … Was a first-team all-league selection all four years (2022, 2023, 2024, 2025)
… Earned All-CIF honors all four years … Named Press Telegram Player of the Year in 2025 … Academically was a academic honor roll honoree all four years of high school.

Prior to UCLA
5-9 / ReDSHIRT JUNIoR
LIBeRo
NApLeS, FLA. GULF CoAST HS
Spent three seasons at Long Beach State, where he won a national championship in 2025, and made the NCAA title match in 2024 ... Redshirted his freshman year in 2023 before playing in 37 matches combined between 2024 and 2025 ... Had two assists and four digs spread out across those two seasons ... In 2024, appeared in 22 matches and played 76 sets, recording 3 digs ... In 2025 helped The Beach to a national championship ... Played in 15 matches and 38 sets, recording two assists and one dig.
Club/National Team
Played for Team Rockstar volleyball club ... Took part in both the U19 Team USA and U21 programs throughout high school … Helped the USA U21 team earn gold at the NORCECA Continental Championships during the summer of 2025.
Personal
Son of Marcus and Martha Turner … Has six older siblings Marcus, Marcelle, Mariel, Mariana, Marisse, and Marleah … Chose UCLA because he felt this was the best option to make me the best he can be on and off the court. I want to be the best player I can be and I knew UCLA could do that for me. After my college career I knew with the academics here I could set myself up for success ... His father Marcus played football at UCLA and then in the NFL for the Cardinals and the Jets, while his sister Marisse played volleyball at Syracuse ... Enjoys playing video games, fishing, and beach volleyball.
High School
Went to Gulf Coast High School … Played for 352 Elite under Coach Roger Peluso … Selected for the 2020 US National U19 Training team … Placed second in 18U at the 2020 USA National Beach Tour Junior Championship … Made the 2021 Junior Nationals All-Tournament Team … Earned third place at the 2022 Junior National Championships … 2022 US National U21 team … Won the 2022 U21 Pan American Cup.
USA Volleyball
Selected for the 2020 US National U19 Training team … Placed second in 18U at the 2020 USA National Beach Tour Junior Championship … Made the 2021 Junior Nationals All-Tournament Team … Earned third place at the 2022 Junior National Championships … 2022 US National U21 team … Won the 2022 U21 Pan American Cup.
Personal
Son of Tracy and Kathy Connelly ... Chose to attend UCLA because of the amazing culture and environment the university provides, the opportunities, facilities, and support are unmatched.
22-7 (10-1 home; 7-3 away; 5-3 neutral; 10-2 conference)
Date
Jan. 10 Saint Francis University W, 3-0 25-15, 25-19, 25-20 1-0 108
Jan. 17 Penn State (First Point Challenge) W, 3-0 25-15, 25-21, 25-23 2-0 2122
Jan. 18 Ohio State (First Point Challange) L, 1-3 20-25, 24-26, 25-13, 17-25 2-1 1450
Jan. 23 UC San Diego W, 3-1 25-22, 25-14, 24-26, 31-29 3-1 942
Jan. 24 @ CSUN W, 3-1 25-15, 23-25, 25-12, 22-17 4-1 1023
Jan. 31 Penn State (Big Ten Challenege) W, 3-0 28-26, 25-22, 25-15 5-1 351
Feb. 1 Ohio State (Big Ten Challenge) W, 3-1 23-25, 25-19, 25-22, 26-24 6-1 1306
Feb. 7 @ Long Beach State L, 1-3 21-25, 25-20, 16-25, 22-25 6-2 4420
Feb. 12 Long Beach State L, 0-3 23, 25, 19-25, 23-25 6-3 4248
Feb. 19 @ UC Irvine W, 3-0 25-22, 25-17, 25-23 7-3 2927
Feb. 22 UC Irvine W, 3-2 21-25, 25-21, 20-25, 25-14, 15-10 8-3 2512
Feb. 26 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-1 25-18, 21-25, 26-24, 25-21 9-3 512
Feb. 28 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-1 25-17, 22-25, 25-20, 25-18 10-3 1017
March 6 Stanford* W, 3-1 23-25, 25-21, 25-19 1-0 11-3 712
March 7 Stanford* W, 3-0 25-22, 25-22, 25-22 2-0 12-3 1017
March 13 @ Vangaurd* W, 3-0 25-18, 25-22, 25-18 3-0 13-3 518
March 15 Vangaurd* W, 3-0 25-18, 25-16, 25-23 4-0 14-3 1521
March 27 Pepperdine* W, 3-0 25-22, 25-23, 25-22 5-0 15-3 530
March 29 @ Pepperdine* W, 3-1 25-22, 25-22, 25-27, 25-16 6-0 16-3 555
April 4 @ Grand Canyon* L, 0-3 19-25, 19-25, 21-25 6-1 16-4 1589
April 5 @ Grand Canyon* W, 3-2 25-20, 17-25, 25-23, 25-27, 15-11 7-1 17-4 1687
April 11 BYU* W, 3-2 22-25, 25-15, 25-21, 25-27, 19-17 8-1 18-4 1066
April 12 BYU* W, 3-1 25-17, 22-25, 25-21, 25-17 9-1 19-4 2018
April 17 USC* W, 3-2 22-25, 25-22, 25-17, 23-25, 15-11 10-1 20-4 3027
April 19 @ USC* L, 0-3 22-25, 22-25, 22-25 10-2 20-5 2781
April 25 Pepperdine (MPSF Tournament SF) L, 2-3 25-19, 22-25, 25-15, 23-25, 14-16 20-6 807
May 8 Belmont Abbey (NCAAs) W, 3-0 25-18, 25-21, 25-19 21-6 673
May 10 Hawaii (NCAAs) W, 3-0 25-14, 25-23, 25-23 22-6 3342
May 12 Long Beach State (NCAAs) L, 0-3 17-25, 23-25, 21-25 22-7 3063
note: MPSF Championship Tournament played at USC and NCAA Championship Tournament played at Long Beach State Home matches in bold played at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom, unless otherwise indicated. *MPSF matches
* 04/04/2025 at Grand Canyon L 0-3 19-25,19-25,21-25 1589
* 04/05/2025 at Grand Canyon W 3-2 25-20,17-25,25-23,25-27,15-11 1687
* 04/11/2025 BYU W 3-2 22-25,25-15,25-21,25-27,19-17 1066
* 04/12/2025 BYU W 3-1 25-17,22-25,25-21,25-17 2018
* 04/17/2025 Southern California W 3-2 22-25,25-22,25-17,23-25,15-11 3027
* 04/19/2025 at Southern California L 0-3 22-25,22-25,22-25 2781
04/25/2025 vs Pepperdine L 2-3 25-19,22-25,25-15,23-25,14-16 807
05/08/2025 vs Belmont Abbey W 3-0 25-18,25-21,25-19 2263
05/10/2025 vs Hawaii W 3-0 25-14,25-23,25-23 3342
05/12/2025 vs Long Beach St. L 0-3 17-25,23-25,21-25 3063
1/17 No. 14 Penn
4/5
4/11
4/17
5/8
5/10 at Hawaii (NCAA Semis at Ohio State) W, 3-0
5/12 at Long Beach State (NCAA Champ. at Ohio St.) L, 0-3 29/37 .192/.354
1/10 Saint Francis W, 3-0
1/17 No. 14 Penn State (at Austin, Tx) W, 3-0
1/18 vs. No.13 Ohio State (at Austin, Tx) L, 1-3
1/23 vs. No.14 UC San Diego W, 3-1
1/24 at No. 15 CSUN W, 3-1
1/31 at No. 17 Penn State W, 3-0
2/1 at No. 13 Ohio State W, 3-1
2/7 at No. 1 Long Beach State L, 1-3
2/12 No. 1 Long Beach State L, 0-3
2/19 at No. 2 UC Irvine W, 3-0
2/22 No. 2 UC Irvine W, 3-2
2/26 No. 16 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-1
2/28 at No. 16 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-1
3/6 No. 10 Stanford W, 3-1
3/7 No. 10 Stanford W, 3-0
3/13 at Vangaurd W, 3-0
3/15 Vangaurd W, 3-0
3/27 No. 9 Pepperdine W, 3-0
3/29 at No. 9 Pepperdine W, 3-1
4/4 at No. 13 Grand Canyon L, 0-3
4/5 at No. 13 Grand Canyon W, 3-2
4/11 No. 7 BYU W, 3-2
4/12
No. 7 BYU W, 3-1
4/17 No. 5 USC W, 3-2
4/19 at No. 5 USC L, 0-3
4/25 No. 4 Pepperdine (MPSF Semis) L, 2-3
5/8 Belmont Abbey (NCAA Qrts. at Ohio State) W, 3-0
5/10 vs. Hawaii (NCAA Semis at Ohio State) W, 3-0
5/12 vs. Long Beach (NCAA Champ. at Ohio State) L, 0-3
David Thorne Edwards
David Thorne Edwards
David Thorne Edwards
David Thorne Wong Diallo
David Thorne Zamprogno
David Thorne Edwards
Decker Thorne Edwards
Decker Thorne Edwards
Decker Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne McQuiggan
Decker Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne McQuiggan
David Thorne Wong Diallo
David Hersh Edwards
David Thorne Edwards
Rama Thorne Edwards
Rama Thorne Edwards
Rama Thorne Edwards
Rama Thorne McQuiggan
Rama Thorne McQuiggan
Rama Thorne McQuiggan
Rama Thorne Edwards
Rama Thorne Wong Dialo
Rama Thorne McQuiggan
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci /Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Taliaferro Curci/Aziz
Robinson Rama Taliaferro Curci/Aziz
Kelly Rama Taliaferro McDonough
Robinson Kelly Rowan McDonough
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Rama Thorne McQuiggan Robinson Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
Rama Thorne McQuiggan
Kelly Rowan Curci/Aziz
UCLA’s collegiate sports championship history stands out as one of the most impressive of any university in the nation. UCLA has proudly totaled 125 NCAA team championships (heading into 2026), 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.
Men’s NCAA Titles (80)
Baseball (1) 2013
Basketball (11) 1964 1971 1965 1972 1967 1973 1968 1975 1969 1995 1970
Golf (2) 1988 2008
Gymnastics (2) 1984 1987
Soccer (4) 1985 1997 1990 2002
Swimming (1) 1982
Women’s NCAA Titles (45)
Soccer (2) 2014 2023
Softball (12) 1982 1990 1984 1992 1985 1999 1988 2003 1989 2004 2010 2019
Volleyball (4) 1984 1991 1990 2011
Indoor Track & Field (2) 2000 2001
Outdoor Track & Field (3) 1982 2004 1983
Tennis (16)
Track & Field (8) 1956 1973 1966 1978 1971 1987 1972 1988
Golf (3) 1991 2004 2011
Gymnastics (7) 1997 2003 2000 2004 2001 2010 2018
Volleyball (21) 1970 1987 1971 1989 1972 1993 1974 1995 1975 1996 1976 1998 1979 2000 1981 2006 1982 2023 1983 2024 1984
Water Polo (14) 1969 1995 1971 1996 1972 1999 2000 2004
Tennis (2) 2008 2014
Water Polo (8) 2001 2007 2003 2008 2005 2009 2006 2024
Year Team(s)
1949-50 Men’s Tennis
1951-52 Men’s Tennis
1952-53 Men’s Tennis
1953-54 Men’s Tennis
1955-56 Men’s Tennis, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field
1959-60 Men’s Tennis
1960-61 Men’s Tennis
1963-64 Men’s Basketball
1964-65 Men’s Basketball, Men’s Tennis
1965-66 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field
1966-67 Men’s Basketball
1967-68 Men’s Basketball
1968-69 Men’s Basketball
1969-70 Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Basketball, Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball
1970-71 Men’s Basketball, Men’s Tennis, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field, Men’s Volleyball
1971-72 Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Basketball, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field, Men’s Volleyball
1972-73 Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Basketball, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field
1973-74 Men’s Volleyball
1974-75 Men’s Basketball, Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball
1975-76 Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball
1977-78 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field
1978-79 Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball
1980-81 Men’s Volleyball
1981-82 Softball, Men’s Swimming & Diving, Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
1982-83 Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
1983-84 Men’s Gymnastics, Softball, Men’s Tennis, Men’s Volleyball
1984-85 Women’s Volleyball, Softball
1985-86 Men’s Soccer
1986-87 Men’s Gymnastics, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field, Men’s Volleyball
1987-88 Men’s Golf, Softball, Men’s Outdoor Track & Field
1988-89 Softball, Men’s Volleyball
1989-90 Softball
1990-91 Men’s Soccer, Women’s Volleyball, Women’s Golf
1991-92 Women’s Volleyball, Softball
1992-93 Men’s Volleyball
Year Team(s)
1994-95
1995-96
1996-97
1997-98
Men’s Basketball, Men’s Volleyball
Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Volleyball
Men’s Water Polo, Women’s Gymnastics
Men’s Soccer, Men’s Volleyball
1998-99 Softball
1999-00
2000-01
2002-03
2003-04
Men’s Water Polo, Women’s Gymnastics, Women’s Indoor Track & Field, Men’s Volleyball
Men’s Water Polo, Women’s Gymnastics, Women’s Indoor Track & Field, Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Soccer, Women’s Gymnastics, Softball, Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Golf, Women’s Gymnastics, Softball, Women’s Outdoor Track & Field 2004-05
2005-06
2006-07
2007-08
2008-09
2009-10
Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Tennis, Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Golf, Women’s Tennis, Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Gymnastics, Softball 2010-11
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
Women’s Golf
Women’s Volleyball
Baseball
Women’s Soccer, Women’s Tennis 2014-15
2015-16
2017-18
2018-19
2020-21
2022-23
2023-24
2024-25
2025-26
Men’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo, Beach Volleyball, Women’s Gymnastics
Beach Volleyball, Softball
Men’s Water Polo
Women’s Soccer, Men’s Volleyball
Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo
Best Records: (1.000) 38-0, 1984; 30-0, 1979; 29-0, 1982
Worst Record: 14-16 (.466), 2009
Most Matches Won: 38, 1984 and ‘87
Most Matches Lost: 16, 2009
Most Matches Played: 41, 1987 (38-3)
Least Matches Played: 17, 1976 (15-2)
Longest Winning Streak: 47 matches, 1983-85
Longest Home Winning Streak: 83 matches, 1975-82
Longest Losing Streak: 5 matches, 2015 and 2011
Most Shutouts: 25 (3-0), 1995
Best Hitting Percentage: .420, 1993 (1891-467-3389, 89g)
Most Kills Per Game: 21.74, 1989
Most Service Aces, Season: 232, 2001*
Most Service Aces Per Game: 2.03, 1998
Most Blocks Per Game: 7.6 (4.16), 1996
Most Digs Per Game: 13.5, 1986
Most Total Attempts: 1,298, Paul Nihipali, 1997
Most Kills: 650, Jeff Nygaard, 1994 and Paul Nihipali, 1997
Most Points: 553.5, Steve Klosterman, 2007**
Best Hitting Percentage: .539, Tim Kelly, 1994
Most Solo Blocks: 40, Trevor Schirman, 1989
Most Block Assists: 203, Scott Morrow, 2000
Most Total Blocks: 221, Trevor Schirman, 1990
Most Blocks Per Game: 2.12, Trevor Schirman, 1990
Most Set Assists: 1,848, Brandon Taliaferro, 1998
Most Matches With Double Figure Blocks: 9, Trevor Schirman, 1990
Most Digs: 368, Tony Ker, 2008
Most Digs Per Game: 3.2, Tony Ker, 2008
Most Service Aces: 67, Micah Ma’a, 2019
Most Services Aces (Freshman): 58, Micah Ma’a, 2016*
Most Triple Doubles: 2, Tom Stillwell, vs. Lewis, 3/4/97 (11k, 17d, 16b) and vs. BYU, 3/28/97 (19k, 13d, 12b)
Most Matches With Double-Figure Digs: 18, Matt Davis, 2000 and Tony Ker, 2008
Last Triple-Double: Home-Sam Kobrine, vs. USC, 2/13/21 (14 kills, 10 digs, 15 set assists); Away-Micah Ma’a, at BYU 3/14/19 (15 kills, 44 set assists, 15 digs)*
SINGLE MATCH INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most Kills: 52, Paul Nihipali (vs. UCSB, 4/27/96)
Consecutive Kills: 31, Steve Klosterman (vs. CSUN, 2/21/07)
Most Total Attempts: 89, Paul Nihipali (vs. Lewis, 3/4/97)
Highest Hitting Percentage (min. 10 attempts):
1.000 Sean McQuiggan (10k-0e-10ta, at UC Irvine, 2/19/25) 1.000, J.R. Norris IV (10k-0e-10ta, at Morehouse, 3/25/22).
Most Set Assists: 110, Brandon Taliaferro (vs. Lewis, 4/30/98)
Most Service Aces: 10, Adam Naeve (vs. Pepperdine, 2/3/01)*
Most Block Solos: 7, Trevor Schirman (vs. CSUN, 4/10/89)
Most Block Assists: 18, Adam Naeve (vs. LMU, 1/30/99)
Most Total Blocks: 18, Dave Mochalski (vs. USC, 4/9/82); Adam Naeve (vs. LMU, 1/30/99)
Most Digs: 27, Tony Ker (vs. Hawai’i, 1/5/08)*
SINGLE SET INDIVIDUAL RECORDS
Most Aces: 6, Sam Burgi (at Ft. Valley St., 3/26/22)
Consecutive Aces: 4, Sam Burgi (at Fort Valley St., 3/26/22); 4, Ethan Champlin (at UCSD, 2/9/22); 4, Jake Arnitz (at USC, 3/28/15) and Adam Naeve (vs. Pepperdine, 2/3/01)*
Most Kills: 21, Ed Ratledge (Game 4 vs. CSUN, 2/17/00)
SINGLE SET TEAM RECORDS
Highest Game Score: 42-44 (Game 4, Hawaii d. UCLA, 1/19/01)*; 39-41 (Set 1, vs. Hawai’i, 4/8/17)
Most Aces: 7, (vs. UCSD, 1/6/23; at Ft. Valley St., 3/26/22; vs. UCSD, 1/5/19; vs. Princeton, 2/1/18; vs. UC San Diego, 1/14/17; vs. Stanford, 3/12/93)
Most Kills: 139 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87)
Fewest Kills: 23 (at Daemen, 1/2/20)*; 27 (vs. USC, 4/14/11)*
Most Errors: 61 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87)
Most Total Attempts: 341 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87)
Fewest Total Attempts: 47 (at Daemen, 1/2/20)*; 52 (at George Mason, 1/5/16)*
Highest Hitting Percentage: .666 (vs. LMU, 2/17/84)
Lowest Hitting Percentage: .041 (vs. Stanford, 4/9/11)*
Lowest Hitting Percentage, Opponent: -.125 Limestone vs. UCLA (at UCSB Tny., 1/10/15 10-16-48)*; -.081 UCLA at Daemen (18-23-62)*; -.076 UCLA at Stanford (16-21-66); -.041 Rutgers-Newark vs. UCLA, 3/16/05 (26-30-97)*
Most Service Aces: 18 (v. UCSD, at UCSB Tny., 1/6/23*) and (at Fort Valley St., 3/26/22); 15 (v. Princeton, 2/1/18 and v. Limestone, at UCSB Tny.,1/10/15)*
Most Block Solos: 17 (vs. Pepperdine, 3/18/83)
Most Block Assists: 44 (vs. Hawaii, 4/13/83)
Longest Match: 3 hours, 45 minutes (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87)
Most Kills: 2,096, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97
Most Attempts: 4,063, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97
Highest Hitting Percentage: .483, Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20
Most Matches With Double Figure Kills: 101, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97
Most Total Blocks: 682, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90
Most Solo Blocks: 120, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90
Most Matches With Double Figure Blocks: 19, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90
Most Set Assists: 6,840, Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00
Most Digs: 1,220, Tony Ker, 2005-08*
Most Matches With Double Figure Digs: 60, Tony Ker, 2005-2008*
Most Aces: 208, Micah Ma’a, 2016-19*
Most Triple-Doubles: 2, Tom Stillwell, UCLA vs. Lewis, 3/4/97 (11k, 17d, 16bk) / vs. BYU, 3/28/97 (19k, 13d, 12bk) and Micah Ma’a, at BYU, 3/14/19 (15k, 44 set asst., 15d) / vs. BYU, 4/2/16 (10k, 24 set asst., 14d)
Largest International Crowd: 23,000 UCLA vs. Republic of China, 1980, at the Chinese Sport and Cultural Center.
Largest Pauley Pavilion Crowd: 9,809 UCLA vs. Pepperdine, 1984 NCAA Championship.
Team and individual statistics were not kept prior to 1981.
*Record set during a rally scoring season; **2004 was the first season points were kept.

Kills
1. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 2,096
2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 1,800
3. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 1,587
4. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 1,513
5. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 1,473
6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 1,387
7. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 1,374
8. Mark Williams, 1998-01 1,245
9. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87 1,237
10. Evan Thatcher, 1997-00 1,083
Total Blocks
1. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 682
2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 658
3. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 544
4. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 538
5. Scott Morrow, 2000-03 522
6. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 492
7. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 466
8. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 458
9. Mike Whitcomb, 1988-91 410
10. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 396 Aces
1. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 208
2. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 194
3. Adam Naeve, 1997-01 178
4. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 176
5. Mark Williams, 1998-01 164
6. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 129
7. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 123 Andrew Rowan, 2023-pres. 123
9. Ethan Champlin, 2021-24 115
10. Stein Metzger, 1993-96 110 Digs
1. Tony Ker, 2005-08 1,220
2. Adam Shrader, 2001-04 1,089
3. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-2000 831
4. Fred Robins, 1996-99 777
5. Mark Williams, 1998-2001 752
6. Erik Sullivan, 1992-95 747
7. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87 746
8. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-2010 741
9. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 728
10. JT Hatch, 2015-18 634 Set Assists
1. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-2000 6,840
2. Stein Metzger, 1993-96 5,158
3. Rich Nelson, 2000-03 4,846
4. Mike Sealy, 1990-93 4,749
5. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 3,427
6. Andrew Rowan, 2023-pres. 3,240
7. Kevin Ker, 2007-2010 3,173
8. Matt Wade, 2006-2009 3,166
9. Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06 3,104
10. Matt Sonnichsen, 1986-89 3,088
Kills
1. Paul Nihipali, 1997 650
Jeff Nygaard, 1994 650
3. Paul Nihipali, 1996 590
4. Adam Naeve, 1998 528
5. Paul Nihipali, 1995 525
6. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 511
7. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 473
8. Steve Klosterman, 2007 472
9. Steve Klosterman, 2006 466
10. Mark Williams, 2000 465
Total Blocks
1. Trevor Schirman, 1990 221
2. Scott Morrow, 2000 220
3. Tom Stillwell, 1996 213
4. Trevor Schirman, 1989 189
5. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 188
6. Jeff Nygaard, 1994 180
7. Don Dendinger, 1986 177
8. Seth Burnham, 2000 176
9. Tom Stillwell, 1997 175
10. Mike Whitcomb, 1989 170 Aces
1. Micah Ma’a, 2019 67
2. Mark Williams, 2000 63
3. Brandon Taliaferro, 2000 59
4. Micah Ma’a, 2016 58
5. Micah Ma’a, 2018 56
Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 56
Adam Naeve, 2001 56
Adam Naeve, 1998 56
9. Stein Metzger, 1996 53
10. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 52
Digs
1. Tony Ker, 2008 368
2. Matt Davis, 2000
3. Tony Ker, 2006 318
4. Ozzie Volstad, 1986
5. Adam Shrader, 2002 303
6. Paul George, 2006 272
7. Tom Hastings, 2010 270
8. Tony Ker, 2005 269
9. Evan Mottram, 2013 267
Adam Shrader, 2004 267 Set Assists
1. Brandon Taliaferro, 1998 1,848
2. Brandon Taliaferro, 2000 1,800
3. Stein Metzger, 1996 1,792
4. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997 1,707
5. Stein Metzger, 1994
6. Rich Nelson, 2002
7. Brandon Taliaferro, 1999
8. Rich Nelson, 2001
Formal statistics have evolved slowly in the sport of collegiate volleyball since the sport was sanctioned by the NCAA in 1970. Unfortunately, the accuracy and definitions of such statistics kept by member schools was not ensured until 1986. The format of a match changed in 2008. The term “game” was changed to “set.” In addition, scoring for those sets moved from 30 points to 25 points, except for the fifth set which is still played to 15. The match format previously changed in 2001, with scoring for each set moving from 15 points to 30 points, except for the fifth set. Official NCAA records began with the 1981 season. In 2011, individual season blocking categories were added for seasons since 2001. In reflection of those changes, categories under different scoring formats are separated to avoid eliminating the achievements of those student-athletes who played under the previous formats. With due respect to the legends of UCLA Men’s Volleyball, their names may not be listed because our records are incomplete in the early years.



Hitting Percentage (Minimum 1000 attempts)
1. Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20 .483
2. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 .462
3. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 .448
4. Chris Peña, 2001-04 .438
5. Danny Farmer, 1996-99 .42772
6. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 .42771
7. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 .424
8. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 .419
9. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 .407
10. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 .404
Kills Per Game (Minimum 1000 attempts)
1. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 5.40
2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 5.14
3. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 4.60
4. Dan Landry, 1990-93 4.28
5. Rich Bland, 1990-93 4.17
6. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 3.84
7. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 3.52
8. Jeff Williams, 1984-87 3.48
9. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 3.43
10. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 3.38
Blocking Average (Minimum 200 games/sets played)
1. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 1.88
2. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 1.75
3. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 1.72
4. Mike Whitcomb, 1988-91 1.58
5. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 1.55
6. Don Dendinger, 1985-88* 1.51
7. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 1.41
8. Scott Morrow, 2000-03 1.40
9. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 1.26
10. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87** 1.23
*Three-year average. **Two-year average.
Hitting Percentage (Minimum 300 attempts)
1. Tim Kelly, 1994 .539
2. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 .528
3. Merrick McHenry, 2023 .526
4. Merrick McHenry, 2022 .523
5. Cameron Thorne, 2025 .521
6. Daenan Gyimahm, 2019 .492 Daenan Gyimah, 2020* .492
8. Paul Johnson, 2005 .491
9. Jeff Nygaard, 1993 .487
10. Thomas Amberg, 2012 .485
*shortened season 258 attempts
Kills Per Game (Minimum 300 attempts)
1. Jeff Nygaard, 1994 6.98
2. Paul Nihipali, 1997 6.19
3. Paul Nihipali, 1996 6.14
4. Paul Nihipali, 1995 5.64
5. Adam Naeve, 1998 5.50
6. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 5.16
7. Ozzie Volstad, 1987 4.96
8. Ed Ratledge, 2000 4.79
9. Adam Naeve, 1999 4.65
10. Trevor Schirman, 1989 4.38
Blocking Average (Minimum 75 games/sets played)
1. Trevor Schirman, 1990
2. Tom Stillwell, 1996
3. Jeff Nygaard, 1992
4. Jeff Nygaard, 1994
5. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 1.89 6. Trevor Schirman, 1989
2000
Adam Naeve, 1999



2001-pRESENt fROm StARt Of RALLy SCORINg ERA
Hitting Percentage (Min 230 Att/Yr)
1. Merrick McHenry, 2020-24 .520
2. Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20 .483
3. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 .448
4. Adam Naeve, 2001 .447
5. Chris Peña, 2001-04 .438
6. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 .407
7. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 .404
8. Scott Morrow, 2001-03 .381
9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 .373
10. Allan Vince, 2003-05 .343
Kills (Min 230 Att/Yr)
1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 1,513
2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 1,473
3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 1,387
4. Jake Arnitz, 2015-18 1,048
5. Ethan Champlin, 2021-24 975
6. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 963
7. Chris Peña, 2001-04 920
8. Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20 909
9. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 883
10. Robart Page, 2011-14 844
Total Attacks (Min 230 Att/Yr)
1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 3,262
2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 3,116
3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 3,090
4. Jake Arnitz, 2015-18 2,272
5. Ethan Champlin, 2021-24 2,071
6. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 1,943
7. Robart Page, 2011-14 1,899
8. JT Hatch, 2015-18 1,884
9. Jack Polales, 2009-12 1,732
10. Sean O’Malley, 2006-09 1,714
Set Assists
1. Rich Nelson, 2001-03 4,346
2. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 3,427
3. Andrew Rowan, 2023-pres. 3,240
4. Matt Wade, 2006-09 3,166
5. Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06 3,104
6. Hagen Smith, 2014-17 2,110
7. Kevin Ker, 2007-10 2,021
8. Kyle Caldwell, 2009-12 1,413
9. Steve O’Dell, 2013-14 1,187
10. Alex Scattareggia, 2009-11 1,149
Aces
1. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 208
2. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 194
3. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 129
4. Andrew Rowanm 2023-pres. 123
5. Ethan Champlin, 2021-24 115
6. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 99
7. Kevin Ker, 2007-2010 99
8. Daenan Gyimah 2017-20 96
9. Dylan Missry, 2016-19 90
10. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 90
1. Tony Ker, 2005-08 1,220
2. Adam Shrader, 2001-04 1,089
3. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 741
4. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 728
5. JT Hatch, 2015-18 634
6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 630
7. Tom Hastings, 2008-11 584
8. Hagen Smith, 2014-17 484
9. Rich Nelson, 2001-03 483
10. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 472
1. Merrick McHenry, 2020-24 47
2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 44
3. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 42
4. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 40
5. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 39
6. Daenan Gyimah, 2017 -20 37
7. Nick Vogel, 2009-12 36
8. Chris Peña, 2001-04 35 Guy Genis, 2022-24 35
10. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-04 32
Block Assists
1. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 424
2. Merrick McHenry, 2020-24 329
3. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 325
4. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 322
5. Daenan Gyimah, 2017 -20 304
6. Scott Morrow, 2001-03 281
7. Nick Vogel, 2009-12
8. Chris Peña, 2001-04
9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09
10. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07
Total Blocks
1. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12
2. Merrick McHenry, 2020-24
2. Paul Johnson, 2002-05
3. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17
4. Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20
5. Scott Morrow, 2001-03
6. Nick Vogel, 2009-12
7. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07
8. Chris Peña, 2001-04
9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09
10. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12
1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07
2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10
3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14
4. Jake Arnitz, 2015-18
5. Daenan Gyimah, 2017-20
6. Ethan Champlin, 2021-24
7. Paul Johnson, 2002-05
8. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12
9. Chris Peña, 2001-04
10. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05



2001-pRESENt fROm StARt Of RALLy SCORINg ERA
Points
1. Steve Klosterman, 2007 553.5
2. Paul Johnson, 2005 551.0
3. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 547.0
4. Steve Klosterman, 2006 528.0
5. Garrett Muagututia, 2010 509.5
6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 504.0
7. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 500.0
8. Christian Hessenauer, 2018 476.5
9. Paul George, 2006 474.0
10. Nick Scheftic, 2006 457.5
Kills
1. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 473
2. Steve Klosterman, 2007 472
3. Steve Klosterman, 2006 466
4. Garrett Muagututia, 2010 446
5. Matt Komer, 2002 434
6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 420
7. Paul Johnson, 2005 413
8. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 411
9. Cameron Mount, 2002 408
10. Paul George, 2006 400
Total Attacks
1. Steve Klosterman, 2006 1,016
2. Steve Klosterman, 2007 994
3. Garrett Muagututia, 2007 958
4. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 897
5. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 889
6. Matt Komer, 2002 871
7. Robart Page, 2014 848
8. Cameron Mount, 2002 835
9. Christian Hessenauer, 2018 824
10. Paul George, 2006 806
Set Assists
1. Rich Nelson, 2002 1,546
2. Rich Nelson, 2001 1,477
3. Rich Nelson, 2003 1,323
4. Micah Ma’a, 2018 1,319
5. Andrew Rowan, 2024 1,157
6. Andrew Rowan, 2023 1,095
7. Matt Wade, 2008 1,068
8. Dennis Gonzalez, 2004 1,066
9. Alex Scattareggia, 2011 1,057
10 Miles Partain, 2022 1,041
Aces
1. Micah Ma’a, 2019 67
2. Micah Ma’a, 2016 58
3. Micah Ma’a, 2018 56 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 56
Adam Naeve, 2001 56
6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 52
7. Mark Williams, 2001 51
8. Andrew Rowan, 2023 50
9. Paul Johnson, 2005 49
10. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2012 47
Digs
1. Tony Ker, 2008 368
2. Tony Ker, 2006 318
3. Adam Shrader, 2002 303
4. Paul George, 2006 272
5. Tom Hastings, 2010 270
6. Tony Ker, 2005
7. Adam Shrader, 2004 267
8. Tony Ker, 2007 265
9. Adam Shrader, 2003
10. Adam Shrader, 2001
Block Solos
1. Guy Genis, 2023
Paul Johnson, 2005
3. Merrick McHenry, 2023
Nick Scheftic, 2006 18
5. Allan Vince, 2005 16
6. Merrick McHenry, 2021 15
Paul Johnson, 2004
Chris Peña, 2003 15
9. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 14
Paul George, 2006
Garrett Muagututia, 2008 14 Sean O’Malley, 2009 14
Thomas Amberg, 2011 14
Block Assists
1. Thomas Amberg, 2012 141
2. Paul Johnson, 2005
3. Daenan Gyimah, 2018
4. Adam Naeve, 2001
5. Scott Morrow, 2001
6. Mitch Stahl, 2016
7. Jamie Diefenbach, 2007
8. David Russell, 2006
9. Nick Scheftic, 2006 109
10. Jamie Diefenbach, 2008 108
Thomas Amberg, 2009 108
Total Blocks
1. Paul Johnson, 2005
2. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 151
3. Thomas Amberg, 2012 150
4. Adam Naeve, 2001 135
5. Scott Morrow, 2001
6. Nick Scheftic, 2006
7. Mitch Stahl, 2016
8. David Russell, 2006
9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2007
10. Thomas Amberg, 2009
Hitting Percentage (Minimum 300 attempts)
1. Merrick McHenry, 2024 .565
2. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 .528
3. Merrick McHenry, 2023 .526
4. Merrick McHenry, 2022 .523
5. Cameron Thorne, 2025 .521
6. Paul Johnson, 2005 .491
7. Thomas Amberg, 2012 .486
8. Mitch Stahl, 2016
9. Weston Dunlap, 2012
10. Spencer Rowe, 2013

Jonathan Acosta, 2003
Average Min.100 digs. Digs in parentheses)
Tony Ker, 2006 (318)
Adam Shrader, 2002 (303)
Adam Shrader, 2003 (263)
Tony Ker, 2007 (265)
Tony Ker, 2005 (269) 2.49
Adam Shrader, 2004 (267) 2.47
Evan Mottram , 2013 (267) 2.10
Adam Shrader, 2001 (256) 2.08
Jackson Bantle, 2015 (177) 2.06 Paul George, 2006 (272) 2.06
Blocking Average (Min. 50 total blocks.-Tot. Blks in parentheses) 1. Thomas Amberg, 2012 (150) 1.43 2. Paul Johnson, 2005 (159) 1.34 3. Thomas Amberg, 2009 (118) 1.33 4. Scott Morrow, 2002 (106) 1.23 5. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 (151) 1.22 Jamie Diefenbach, 2007 (123) 1.22 7. Guy Genis, 2023 (102) 1.21
8. Mitch Stahl, 2016 (124) 1.19
9. Scott Morrow, 2003 (65) 1.18181
10. Scott Morrow, 2001 (131) 1.18180
AJulio “Gaby” Acevedo, 05
Jonathan Acosta, 02-03-04-05
Jim Adomoli, 60-61-62-63
Mike Allio, 64-66-68
Thomas Amberg, 09-10-11-12
Rick Amon, 78-79-81
Tom Anderson, 60-61
Mark Anderson, 80-82
John Anselmo, 89-91-92-93
Jake Arnitz, 15-16-17-18
Peter Ashley, 75-76-77
Aleksandar Babic, 91
Carl Bailey, 60-61
Colin Bailey, 18
Andy Banachowski, 65-68
Connor Bannan, 11
Jackson Bantle, 14-15-16-17
Tom Barr, 64
Michael Beals 13-14
Bob Becker, 64
Ed Becker, 69-70
John Bekins, d., 73-74-75
Pete Blackman, 62
Rich Bland, 90-92-93
Aaron Boone, 95
Brian Boone, 89-90
Dylan Bowermaster, 07-10
Jeremy Brandt, 94
Jim Brazier, 72
Jonathan Bridgeman, 10-11-13
Doug Brooks, 75-76-77
Dave Brown, 78-79
Doug Brown, 74-75
Sam Burgi, 20-21-22
Steve Burian, 63-64-65-66
Ian Burnham, 01
Seth Burnham, 97-98-00
Kyle Caldwell, 09-11-12
James Calonico, 64
Jeff Campbell, 85
John Carmack, 63
Scott Carter, 67
Jeremy Casebeer, 10-11-12
Eric Chaghouri, 05-06-07
Grant Chalmers, 14-15
Tom Chamales, 73
Seth Champi, 99-00
Ethan Champlin, 21-22-23-24
Roger Clark, 81-82-83-84
Jamie Cleary, 87-88
Denny Cline, 74-75-76
George Conkey, 66-67-68
Jim Conkey, 62
Dan Conners, 01
Greg Coon, 00-01
Ron Coon, 71-72-73
Buddy Cox, 74
Anthony Curci, 85-87-88-89
Ido David, 22-23-24-25
Matt Davis, 97-98-99-00

Jesse Debban, 01-03
Ned DeGroot, 65
Mike Denver, 92
Don Dendinger, 85-86-87-88
Jamie Diefenbach, 06-07-08
Mike Diehl, 92-93
Mike Desroches, 63-64
Aaron Dodd, 04-05
Kurt Donaldson, 74
Steve Drummy, 61-62-63-65
Weston Dunlap, 08-10-11-12
Steve Eddy, 66
Matthew Edwards, 23-24-25
Peter Ehrman, 78-79-80-81
Dale Eicks, 68
Keith Erickson, 65
Ian Eschenberg, 19-20-21
Gordon Evans, 60-63
Danny Farmer, 96-97-98-99
Michael Fisher, 14-15-16-17
Mike Franklin, 72-73-75-76
Ken Freeman, 71-72-73
Steve Fritzen, 67-68
Mike Garcia, 88-90
Ayrton Garcia-Jurado, 2023
Gray Garrett, 02-03-05
Guy Genis, 2022-23-24
Paul George, 05-06-07
Davis Gillett, 16-17
Greg Giovanazzi, 76-77-78
Troy Gooch, 2023
Wally Goodrick, 82-83-84
Dennis Gonzalez, 03-04-05-06
Stan Gordon, 67-68
Mike Gottschall, 75-76-77
Matt Grace, 99
Larry Griebenow, 71-72
Steve Gulnac, 79-80-81-83
Kurt Gunderson, 83-84
Daenan “Kofi” Gyimah, 17-18-19-20
Andor Gyulai, 97-98
Matt Hanley, 11
Albert Hanneman, 90
Bill Hansard, 77
Jason Harper, 95, 96
Thomas Hastings, 08-11
JT Hatch, 15-16-17-18
Carl Henkel, 88-89-90-91
Scott Herdman, 89-90-91
John Herren, 73-74-75
Bruce Herring, 69-70-71
Christian Hessenauer, 15-16-17-18
Dane Holtzman, 69-70
Jerald Hyde, 62-63
IChris Irvin, 73-74-75
Richard Irvin, 70-71-72
Kene Izuchukwu, 12
JJeff Jacobs, 72-73
Charlie Jackson, 96-97-98
Ian Jackson, 06
Ryal Jagd, 10-11
Marcin Jagoda, 01-04
Barry Johnson, 62
Cole Johnson, 20
Paul Johnson, 02-03-04-05
Sam Jones, 18-19
Jonah Kay, 2019
Tim Kelly, 91-92-93-94
K.C. Keller, 76-77-78-79
Jamey Ker, 09, 11
Kevin Ker, 07-08-09-10
Tony Ker, 05-06-07-08
Trent Kersten, 13-14-15
Cole Ketrzynski, 20-21-22-23
Kirk Kilgour, 69-70-71
Mark Kinnison, 80-81-82
Karch Kiraly, 79-80-81-82
Gordon Kleinpeter, 60-61
Steve Klosterman, 04-05-06-07
Andy Klussmann, 83-84-85-86
Kevin Kobrine, 20-21-22
Sam Kobrine, 18-19-20-21
Matt Komer, 99-00-01-02
Alex Knight, 20-21-22-23-24
Mark Knudsen, 92
Kris Kraushaar, 02-03-04-05
Mads Kyed Jensen, 20
LArne Lamberg, 85-86-87
Dan Landry, 90-91-92-93
Chris Lee, 68
Bob Leonard, 71-72-73-74
Bill Levin, 63

Chen Levitan, 10
Phil Leymeyer, 60-61-62
David Lin, 00
Phil Lingman, 65
Ricci Luyties, 81-82-83-84
Austin Matautia, 19-20-21
Micah Ma’a, 16-17-18-19
Grant Maleski, 18-19-20-21
Eric Matheis, 15-16-18
Daniel Matheney, 20-21-22
Mike McCann, 67-68
Coleman McDonough, 23-24-25
Merrick McHenry, 21-22-23-24
Matt McKinney, 03-04-05
Bjorn Maaseide, 90
Ed Machado, 68-69-70-71
Mike Madison, 68-69
Lee Mason, 60-61
Oliver Martin, 15-16-17-18
Wally Martin, 81-82-83-84
Jim Menges, 72-73-74
Robert Metcalf, 70
Stein Metzger, 93-94-95-96
Joe Mica, 75-76-77-79
Greg Miller, 66-67
Dylan Missry, 16-17-18-19
Dave Mochalski, 82
Scott Morrow, 00-01-02-03
Ben Moselle, 96-97-98
Evan Mottram, 12-13
Cameron Mount, 00-01-02
Garrett Muagututia, 07-10
Sean Myhill, 77
Adam Naeve, 97-98-99-01
Rich Nelson, 00-01-02-03
George A. Negrete, 76
Trong Nguyen, 94-95-96-97
David Nichols, 74-75-77
Shaun Nichols, 07
Paul Nihipali, 94-95-96-97
Matt Noonan, 94-95-96
Mike Normand, 73-74
J.R. Norris IV, 19-20-22-23
Jeff Nygaard, 92-93-94-95
Dave Olbright, 76-77-78
Steve O’Dell, 13-14
Sean O’Malley, 06-07-08-09
Chris Orem, 19-20
Tim Otterman, 84-85
PRobart Page, 2011-12-13-14
Kyle Palmer, 13-14
Ian Parish, 18, 20-21-22
Adam Parks, 19-20-21
Alex Parks, 18-19
Marcus Partain, 21-22
Miles Partain, 21-22
Doug Partie, 81-82-83-84
Kendall Partie, 13
Clayton Paullin, 13-14-15
Bill Pearlman, 62-64-65
Garland Peed V, 18-19
Chris Peña, 01-02-03-04
Cole Pender, 19-20-21-22
Sabin Perkins, 74
Brett Perrine, 07-08-09-10
Matt Perry, 89
Beau Peters, 04-07
Ross Pier, 91-92-93-94
Chris Pliha, 92
Jack Polales, 09-11
Cole Power, 20-21
Brennan Prahler, 02-03-05
QGonzalo Quiroga, 11-12-13-14
RDoug Rabe, 75-76-77-78
Zach Rama 23-24-25
Art Rasmussen, 82-83-84
Ed Ratledge, 99-00
Ryan Ratelle, 06-08-09
Brandon Rattray, 19
Jake Reeves, 14-15-16
Neil Riddell, 83-85
Kent Robinett, 87-88
Fred Robins, 96-97-98-99
Cooper Robinson, 23-24-25
Brian Rofer, 78-79-80
Scott Rolles, 78-80
Andrew Rowan, 23-24-25
Spencer Rowe, 11-12-13-14
Larry Rundle, 65-66
David Russell, 02-03-05-06
Mike Ryan, 66-67-68
Pat Ryan, 68
SSpencer Sachs 16-17-18-19
Steve Salmons, 77-78-79-81
Dave Saunders, 79-80-81-82
J.B. Saunders, 87-88-90
Al Scates, 60-61-62-63
Alex Scattareggia, 10-11
Dave Schaffer, 67
Nick Scheftic, 03-04-05-06
Oren Sher, 89-90
Trevor Schirman, 87-88-89-90
Andy Schutz, 62-63-64-65
Damien Scott, 04-05-06
Dick Scott, 60-61-62-63
Larry Scott, 74-77
Mike Sealy, 90-91-92-93
Jimmy Sepulveda, 02
Ian Sequeira, 13-14
Joe Shirley, 69-70
Adam Shrader, 01-02-03-04
Matt Shubin, 03-04
Mark Slevcove, 78-80-81-82
Grant Sloane, 22-23-24
Andrew Smith, 80
Hagen Smith, 14-15-16-17
Kent Smith, 81
Mark Slevcove, 78-80-81-82
Andrew Smith, 80
Hagen Smith, 14-15-16-17
Kent Smith, 81
Parker Smith, 02
Sinjin Smith, 76-77-78-79
Matt Sonnichsen, 86-87-88-89
John Speraw, 92-93-94-95
Eric Sprague, 15-16-17
Mitch Stahl, 14-15-16-17
Mike Stafford, 86-88
Tom Stillwell, 95-96-97-98
Randy Stoklos, 80
Steve Stovitz, 84-85-86
D.J. Stromath, 06
Fred Sturm, 72-73-75-76
Erik Sullivan 92-93-94-95
Reed Sunahara 82-83-84-86
Steve Suttich, 76-77
Bill Suwara, 87-88-89
Ernie Suwara, 65-66-67
Scott Swartzbaugh, 86
David Swatik, 91-92

Brandon Taliaferro, 97-98-99-00
Matt Taylor, 93-94-95-96
Mark Tedsen, 87-88-89-90
Evan Thatcher, 97-98-99-00
Craig Thompson, 69
Bob Thomson, 68-71-72
Mike Timmons, 78-79-80-81
Toshi Toyoda, 69
James Turner, 96
Henry Unger, 60-61
Eric Vallely, 96-97-98
Scott Vegas, 10-11-12-13
Allan Vince, 03-04-05
Nick Vogel, 09-10-11-12
Kyle Vom Steeg, 21-22-23
Dan Vrebalovich, 85
Asbjorn Volstad, 84-85-86-87
Matt Wade, 06-07-08-09
Benny Wang, 87-88-89-90
Rick Watson, 64
James Welch, 70-71
Kris Welch, 01
Brian Wells, 93-94-95-96
J.T. Wenger, 01-03-04
Jeff Williams, 84-85-86-87
Mark Williams, 98-99-00-01
Mike Whitcomb, 88-89-90-91
Matt Whitaker, 85-86-87-89
Jeff Woodley, 08
Kevin Wong, 92-93-94-95
Court Young, 98-99
Matt Younggren, 19-20
John Zajec, 70-71-72
John Zappia, 14-15-16
Saul Zemaitaitis, 03-04
(1979-Present)
#1
Cameron Thorne, 2025-26
Kyle Vom Steeg, 2020-23
Garland Peed V, 2018-19
Jackson Bantle, 2014-17
Jamey Ker, 2011-12
Cooper O’Connor, 2010
Jamey Ker, 2009
Tony Ker, 2005-08
David Russell, 2002-03
Ian Burnham, 2001
Seth Burnham, 1997-00
Kanoa Ostrem, 1991
Benny Wang, 1989-90
Jeff Williams, 1984-87
Mark Slevcove, 1980-82
Dave Brown, 1979
#2
Jaidin Russell, 2024-26
J.R. Norris IV, 2018-23
Davis Gillett, 2016-17
Steve O’Dell, 2013-15
Mitchell Johnson, 2010
Sean O’Malley, 2006-09
Beau Peters, 2004-05
Jesse Debban, 2001-03
Eric Vallely, 1997-98
Kevin Wong, 1995
Greg Gratteau, 1994
John Anselmo, 1991-93
Mike Stafford, 1986, 88
Ecko Osorio, 1983
Peter Ehrman, 1979-81
#3
Luca Curci, 2024-26
Cole Ketrzynski, 2020-23
Alex Parks, 2018-19
Michael Fisher, 2014-17
Evan Mottram, 2013
Kristian Kuld, 2012
Tom Hastings, 2009-10
Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06
Paul Jocas, 2001
Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00
Matt Noonan, 1995-96
Ross Pier, 1991-94
Matt Sonnichsen, 1987-89
Roger Clark, 1982-84
#4
Brogan Glenn, 2026
Thiago Zamprogno, 2024-25
Troy Gooch, 2023
Cole Pender, 2019-22
Oliver Martin, 2014-18
Matthew Hanley, 2011-12
Chen Levitan, 2010
Cooper O’Connor, 2007-08
Blake Taylor, 2006
J.T. Wenger, 2004
Parker Smith, 2001
Matt Davis, 1997-00
Eric Vallely, 1996
Matt Noonan, 1994
Mike Denver, 1991-94
Jamie Cleary, 1985-88
Kelly Ferris, 1983
Dave Saunders, 1979-82
#5
Caleb Sapp, 2025-26
Ayrton Garcia-Jurado, 2022-23-24
Sam Kobrine, 2017-21
Teddy Goetz, 2009-10
Beau Peters, 2006-07
Paul Johnson, 2002-05
Mark Williams, 1998-01
Stein Metzger, 1995-96
Trong Nguyen, 1994
Mike Diehl, 1992-93
Rand Rognlien, 1991
Mike Garcia, 1990
J.B. Saunders, 1987-88
Neil Riddell, 1983-86
Brian Rofer, 1979-81
#6
Spencer Graves, 2024-26
Marcus Partain, 2020-22
Jonah Kay, 2016-19
Clayton Paullin, 2013-15
Weston Dunlap, 2011-12
Jeff Woodley, 2006-09
Gray Garrett, 2002-05
Seth Champi, 1999-00
Matt Grace, 1997
Todd Eliassen, 1996
Kevin Wong, 1992-94
Albert Hanneman, 1990
Allan Chao, 1986
Tim Otterman, 1984-85
Gary Constantino, 1979
#7
Andrew Rowan, 2023-26
Ian Parish, 2018-22
Mitch Stahl, 2014-17
Scott Vegas, 2013
Nick Vogel, 2011-12
Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10
Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05
Trong Nguyen, 1995-97
Mike Sealy, 1990-93
Mark Snudsen, 1989
Dan Vrebalovich, 1985
Kent Smith, 1981
Scott Rolles, 1980
#8
Micah Wong Diallo, 2024-26
Kevin Kobrine, 2019-22
Eric Matheis, 2015-18
Jonathan Bridgeman, 2013-14
Kyle Caldwell, 2009-12
Aaron Dodd, 2004-06
Kris Welch, 2001
Jared Dannis, 1998
Brian Wells, 1995-96
David Swatik, 1991-93
Mark Tedsen, 1990
Matt Whitaker, 1985-87
#9
Trent Taliaferro, 2025-26
Guy Genis, 2022-23-24
Brandon Rattray, 2019-20
JT Hatch, 2015-18
Julio Acevedo, 2005
Matthew Acosta, 2004
Jimmy Sepulveda, 2002-03
Evan Thatcher, 1997-00
Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95
Mike Stafford, 1989
Andy Klussman, 1983-86
Andrew Smith, 1979-81
Filippos Chrysostomou, 2026
Sean McQuiggan, 2022-23-24-25
Grant Maleski, 2018-21
Reece Salmons, 2017
Jake Reeves, 2014-16
Connor Bannan, 2012-13
Alex Scattareggia, 2011
Brett Perrine, 2007-10
Damien Scott, 2003-06
Greg Coon, 2001
John Coon, 2000
Paul Nihipali, 1994-97
Dan Landry, 1990-93
Wally Goodrick, 1982-84
Jon Weiglin, 1980
Cooper Robinson, 2022-23-24-25
Cole Johnson, 2019-20
Dominic Brousard, 2016-17
Aaron Boone, 1995
Stein Metzger, 1993-94
Aleksandar Babic, 1991-92
Brian Maaseide, 1990
Matt Sonnichsen, 1986
Ricci Luyties, 1981-84
Randy Stoklos, 1980
Sean Kelly, 2025-26
Alex Knight, 2020-23-24
Dylan Missry, 2016-19
Ian Sequeira, 2013-14
Evan Mottram, 2012
Spencer Rowe, 2011
Ted Slaughter, 2009
Dylan Bowermaster, 2007-08
Sam Nelson, 2000
Donald Puathasnanon, 1997-98
Matt Taylor, 1994-96
Jeremy Brandt, 1992
J.B. Saunders, 1990-91
Matt Perry, 1989
Don Dendinger, 1985-88
Art Rasmussen, 1982, 84
Kurt Gunderson, 1980
Matthew Thorton, 2026
Merrick McHenry, 2020-23-24
Micah Ma’a 2016-19
Mark Anderson, 1982
Matthew Aziz, 2022-23-24-25
Cole Power, 2020-21
Sam Jones, 2017-19
Trent Kersten, 2013-15
Jack Polales, 2009-12
James Scilacci, 2008
Steve Klosterman, 2004-07
Scott Morrow, 2000-03
Fred Robins, 1996-99
John Speraw, 1992-95
Mike Whitcomb, 1990-91
Rich Bland, 1989
Anthony Curci, 1985-88
Wallace Martin, 1980-84
Christopher Hersh, 2023-26
Daniel Matheney, 2019-22
Jake Arnitz, 2015-18
Robart Page, 2011-14
Jack Mergenthaler, 2010
Matt Wade, 2007-09
David Russell, 2005-06
Rich Nelson, 2000-03
Danny Farmer, 1996-99
Erik Sullivan, 1992-95
Carl Henkel, 1990-91
Ido David, 2022-25
Daenan “Kofi” Gyimah, 2017-20
Grant Chalmers, 2014-15
Dane Worley, 2011, 13
Weston Dunlap, 2008-10
Kent Kraushaar, 2007
Nathan Bosza, 2006
Paul George, 2004
Cameron Mount, 2000-02
Evan Thatcher, 1996
Jeremy Brandt, 1994
Rich Bland, 1990-93
Arne Lamberg, 1983, 85-87
David Flores, 2024
Sam Burgi, 2019-22
Christian Hessenauer, 2015-18
Spencer Rowe, 2012-14
Dylan Bowermaster, 2010
D.J. Stromath, 2006-09
Allan Vince, 2004-05
Tom Stillwell, 1995-98
Brian Boone, 1990-92
Matt Whitaker, 1989
Kurt Gunderson, 1983-84
Rick Bankson, 1980
Grant Sloane, 2021-22-23-24
Chris Orem, 2018-19-20
Kyle Palmer, 2014
Thomas Amberg, 2009-12
Ian Jackson, 2007
Brennan Prahler, 2002-05
Adam Naeve, 2001
Greg Coon, 2000
Adam Naeve, 1997-99
Brett Grube, 1995-96
Brian Wells, 1993-94
Steve Lucas, 1992
Scott Herdman, 1989-91
Benny Wang, 1987-88
David Decker, 2023-26
Ian Eschenberg, 2019-22
Eric Sprague, 2014-17
Kendall Partie, 2013
Scott Vegas, 2011-12
Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09
Saul Zemaitaitis, 2003-04
Charlie Jackson, 1996-98
Steve Lucas, 1994
Chris Pliha, 1991-94
Oren Sher, 1990
Anthony Curci, 1989
Carl Brittain, 1982
Mark Anderson, 1980
Grayson Bradford, 2026
Matthew Chun, 2025
Ethan Champlin, 2021-22-23-24
Ethan Hill, 2020
Colin Bailey, 2018
Kendall Partie, 2014
Ben Moselle, 1996-98
Brett Grube, 1994
Mark Shoptaw, 1993
Mark Knudsen, 1991-92
Trevor Schirman, 1987-90
Doug Partie, 1982-84
K.C. Keller, 1979
Zach Rama, 2023-26
Mads Kyed Jensen, 2020
Spencer Sachs, 2016-19
Tom Hastings, 2011
Kent Kraushaar, 2009
Paul George, 2005-07
Chris Pena, 2001-04
Greg Gratteau, 1996
Jason Harper, 1994
Adam Peacocke, 1992
Bjorn Maaseide, 1991
Bill Suwara, 1985-89
Bill Morris, 1984
Scott Ford, 1979-81
Matthew Edwards, 2022-25
Adam Parks, 2018-21
Hagen Smith, 2014-17
Scott Leslie, 1991
Dave Michalski, 1986
Dave Mochalski, 1982
Sinjin Smith, 1979
Rafael Urbina, 2026
Coleman McDonough, 2023-25
Austin Matautia, 2019-21
Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14
Ryan Ratelle, 2006-09
Patrick Nihipali, 2003
Dan Conners, 2001
James Turner, 1995-96
Tim Kelly, 1991-94
Mark Tedsen, 1987-89
Scott Swartzbaugh, 1983, 85-86
Kevin Taguchi, 1982
Rick Amon, 1979-81
Marek Turner, 2026
Kahale Clini, 2025
Miles Partain, 2021-23
Matt Younggren, 2019-20
Adam Shrader, 2001-04
Ed Ratledge, 1999-00
Jason Harper, 1996
Monty Smith, 1994
Asbjorn Volstad, 1984-87
Mark Kinnison, 1979-82
#25
Kevin Ker, 2007-10
Matt McKinney, 2003-05
Matt Komer, 1999-02
Court Young, 1996
Kent Steffes, 1989
Steve Stovitz, 1984-86
Joe Mica, 1979
Kris Kraushaar, 2003-05
Ryan Kittel, 2000
Andor Gyulai, 1996-98
Mike Garcia, 1986
Randy Sherwood, 1984-85 #27
Ryal Jagd, 2010-12
Kristian Kuld, 2009
Matt Shubin, 2002-06
David Lin, 2001
Court Young, 1999
Kent Robinett, 1987-88
Mike Timmons, 1979-81 #28
Christopher Connelly, 2026
Kene Izuchukwu, 2012-13
Nick Vogel, 2009-10
James Jessen, 2005
Brian Boone, 1989
Reed Sunahara, 1982-84, 1986 #29
Carl Henkel, 1989-90
Jeff Campbell, 1985
Steve Salmons, 1979-81 #30
Jeremy Casebeer, 2008-12
Mark Lovein, 2005-07
Mike Whitcomb, 1988-89
Steve Gulnac, 1979-82 #31
Karch Kiraly, 1979-82 #32
Michael Beals, 2013-14
Matt Wade, 2006
Oren Sher, 1989 #33
Phil Darin, 2011
Eric Chaghouri, 2005-07
Marcin Jagoda, 2003-04
#34
John Zappia, 2014-16
Alex Scattareggia, 2009-10
Matt Shubin, 2003-04
#36
Jonathan Bridgeman, 2010

Since 1970, UCLA has won 21 NCAA volleyball titles. Among UCLA sports, that total is a school record. Below are capsule summaries of UCLA’s 21 NCAA title teams. The 21 titles for a single sport rank tied for 9th-most among all Division I programs (first is Oklahoma State wrestling which has captured 34 titles).
The Bruins won the first NCAA championship in Pauley Pavilion by surviving a round-robin tournament and easily sweeping Long Beach State in the final. The Bruins’ Dane Holtzman (MVP), and All-Tournament selections Kirk Kilgour and Ed Becker gave coach Al Scates the first of 19 title trophies.
Again UCLA played host and repeated as champion. The Bruins, despite an easy victory in their first match, survived the tough round-robin pool play format where they were extended to three games twice. In the finals, UCLA defeated UC Santa Barbara in three games. Kirk Kilgour ended a brilliant UCLA career by sharing Co-MVP honors with the Gauchos’ Tim Bonynge. The Bruins’ Larry Griebenow and Ed Machado were All-Tournament selections.
The Bruins won their third consecutive title as heavy underdogs to San Diego State and UC Santa Barbara at Ball State. The Bruins, who received an at-large bid, were routed by SDSU in round-robin play, but an upset against UCSB gave them a final match showdown against the Aztecs. SDSU appeared ready for a three-game sweep, winning the first two games, 15-10, 15-9, and opening an 8-3 lead in Game 3. But the Bruins rallied after Scates called a timeout. MVP Dick Irvin and All-Tournament selection John Zajec sparked the comeback.
UC Santa Barbara was the heavy favorite to win at home and easily beat the Bruins in Games 1 and 3 in the title match. With the Gauchos ahead 6-1 in the fifth game, Scates inserted seldom-used freshman Sabin Perkins, who served six straight points, including three aces, to reverse the momentum and give UCLA its fourth championship in five years. UCLA’s Bob Leonard was named MVP, and Mike Normand and Jim Menges were named to the All-Tournament squad.

After a two-year title drought, the Bruins returned to the NCAA Championships on their home court unbeaten and primed to become collegiate volleyball’s first undefeated team. Despite dropping the first game, 12-15 to USC, Joe Mica sparked the comeback that gave UCLA its historic 31-0 season. Sinjin Smith was voted MVP and Steve Salmons, Peter Ehrman and Mica were named to the All-Tournament team.

UCLA overcame injuries to win a fivegame match against arch rival USC. The Trojans led 5-1 and 9-7 in the fifth game, but All-Tournament selection Steve Salmons, who spent most of the season rehabilitating his knee, rallied the Bruins this time. MVP Karch Kiraly set brilliantly and Steve Gulnac earned All-Tournament honors. The victory avenged the previous year’s four-game loss to USC in the finals at Ball State.
Ranked No. 1 and undefeated, the Bruins entered the NCAA Tournament as heavy favorites. UCLA swept Ohio State in the semifinals. The next night the Bruins downed host Penn State, 15-4, 15-9, 15-7. Kiraly became the first player in collegiate volleyball history to receive MVP honors two straight years, and Doug Partie, Mark Kinnison and Dave Mochalski were All-Tournament selections.
Despite losing three of their first six conference matches, the Bruins rolled to their second straight league title, forcing Pepperdine, which had beaten UCLA in two of three meetings, into the grueling regionals. The Waves won the wildcard spot, setting the stage for another UCLA-Pepperdine battle. In the semifinals, UCLA cruised to a threegame victory over Ohio State, and the Waves obliged by beating Penn State. In the final, UCLA dominated play at the net and limited the Waves to a .099 hitting percentage. The three-game sweep gave coach Al Scates his 10th NCAA title, tying him with John Wooden. Ricci Luyties was voted Most Outstanding Player and Wally Martin, Doug Partie and Steve Gulnac joined him on the All-Tournament Team.
UC Santa Barbara invaded Pauley Pavilion unbeaten and with the reputation as the best collegiate volleyball team in history. Before more than 8,000 fans, Scates received a great final match performance from MVP John Bekins and fine hitting and blocking from All-Tournament members John Herron and Joe Mica, as well as Chris Irvin, Fred Sturm and Denny Cline.
Down 15-14 in Game 1 against Pepperdine at Ball State, the Bruins staged another of their patented comebacks after backup setter Steve Suttich made a diving save off what appeared to be the game point. The Bruins went on to easily win Games 2 and 3 and their sixth title of the decade.
Several milestones were achieved during this historic season. In addition to an undefeated season, the Bruins’ 38 victories were an NCAA men’s volleyball record as well as a school record. Scates guided UCLA to an unprecedented fourth consecutive national championship, his 11th in the 15-year history of the sport, moving him ahead of Wooden. The title match drew a record 9,809 spectators, and UCLA’s Ricci Luyties earned Most Outstanding Player honors for the second straight year. Other Bruins named to the All-Tournament Team were seniors Doug Partie and Roger Clark, plus freshman Ozzie Volstad, who would be instrumental in the Bruins’ next title season.
The Bruins stormed into the NCAA Tournament with all the advantages: a 25-match winning streak, a No. 1 seeding, two weeks of rest, the country’s best record, the home court crowd and a wealth of tradition. In typical Al Scates fashion, UCLA breezed past Ohio State in the semifinals, while USC needed five games to outlast a tough Penn State team. A crowd of 8,952, third largest in collegiate volleyball history, cheered as the Bruins swept past their arch rivals in a two-hour, three-game match, 15-11, 15-2, 16-14. UCLA tied its school record for single season victories by finishing with a 38-3 record, and senior All-American Ozzie Volstad capped an outstanding career by earning Most Outstanding Player honors. Seniors Jeff Williams and Arne Lamberg also were named to the All-Tournament Team.
The Bruins were hosts for the 20th annual tournament, featuring a final match showdown between a veteran coach and his young understudy. Fred Sturm, a member of the Bruins’ 1976 NCAA title team, entered Pauley Pavilion as head coach of Stanford, playing in its first title match. In the semifinals, the Bruins swept Penn State, while the Cardinal got a scare from Ball State before winning in four. In the final, the Bruins jumped off to a quick start and won Games 1 and 2, 15-1, 15-13. Stanford appeared to have regrouped in Game 3 by stomping the Bruins 15-4, but Scates and MVP Matt Sonnichsen hung on to win Game 4, 15-12. Bruins named to the All-Tournament team were Trevor Schirman, who shut down Stanford Olympian Scott Fortune, and seniors Anthony Curci and Matt Whitaker.

UCLA ended a three-year championship drought by sweeping Ohio State in the semifinals and upstart Cal State Northridge in the finals. The Bruins continued several championship streaks: they extended their Pauley Pavilion NCAA post-season winning string to 20 consecutive matches and ran their record in home court NCAA finals to 14-0. Scates’ 14th NCAA title inched him closer to the national record. Senior setter Mike Sealy and sophomore quick hitter Jeff Nygaard earned co-Most Outstanding Player honors. Senior Dan Landry and sophomore Kevin Wong also were voted to the NCAA All-Tournament Team. The Bruins set a two-match NCAA Tournament record by hitting .463, and Nygaard set a single match championship record by hitting .867 (13-0-15) against Ohio State.
The championship returned to volleyball’s birthplace and the kingpin of the sport reclaimed its crown. Following the second-place finish to Penn State the previous year, UCLA’s four fifth-year seniors vowed revenge in earnest. UCLA avenged a shocking 3-0 mid-season loss to Ball State by spanking the Cardinals 3-0 in the semifinals. Revenge also served as the major motivation against Penn State. The Bruins swept them in the finals to restore order to the collegiate volleyball world. Along the way the Bruins established some impressive records: 34 straight weeks as the nation’s No.1 ranked team, a string of 34 home victories and three consecutive 19-0 MPSF title seasons. Senior Jeff Nygaard won his second straight AVCA and Volleyball Magazine Player of the Year awards, and Stein Metzger, John Speraw and Nygaard were named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team, the latter selected as Most Outstanding Player.
The improbable championship proved one of the most exciting and gratifying for coach Al Scates. “This one was special because we had to work so hard for it,” said Scates, whose 16th title tied him with former Houston golf coach Dave Williams for the NCAA lead. With four starters gone from the previous season, the Bruins gutted out No.16 in a thrilling five-game, three-hour and twenty-seven minute final against Hawaii, the preseason favorite. The victory raised the Bruins’ intimidating post-season home-court record to 24-0 and improved their overall NCAA playoff record to 43-4. UCLA’s Stein Metzger, the AVCA co-Player of the Year, earned All-Tournament honors along with the Bruins’ Tom Stillwell, who led the country in blocking average.

The Bruins saved their best for last in winning for Scates a record-breaking 17th title. After outlasting Lewis University 3-2 in the semifinals, the final against Pepperdine on a hostile court proved to be a match of veterans vs. inexperience. With five of six starters boasting NCAA championship match experience, the Bruins cruised to a 3-0 victory over the Waves, who claimed just one starter with previous championship experience. Scates saved his best game plan for the final, which produced a Bruin hitting percentage of .454 and nine aces. Adam Naeve, who spiked 23 kills on .629 hitting and added three aces and five blocks, was named Most Outstanding Player. Setter Brandon Taliaferro and outside hitter Fred Robins also were named to the All-Tournament Team.

This championship was all about avenging past demons. The coaches were determined to eradicate all the bad memories of losing the 1994 championship match to Penn State at IPFW and the players wanted to redeem themselves after losing in the first round of the 1999 league playoffs. Senior setter Brandon Taliaferro guided UCLA to a pair of sweeps over Penn State in the semifinals and Ohio State in the finals. Against OSU, the Bruins hit .459 for the match, served eight aces, and out-blocked the Buckeyes, 12-6. Senior Evan Thatcher led all players with 25 kills (.468). Taliaferro and junior Mark Williams added three aces apiece and sophomore Matt Komer led the team with six blocks. The turning point in the match came in Game 3 when senior Ed Ratledge rallied the Bruins from a 13-8 deficit by serving two points, including an ace. Taliaferro earned Most Outstanding Player honors and seniors Seth Burnham and Thatcher were named to the All-Tournament Team.
On March 17, the Bruins rallied to defeat USC 3-2 to win the Kilgour Cup. The victory improved the Bruins’ overall record to 13-12 and ignited a 14-match winning streak that included several improbable upsets: 3-1 at Hawaii in the MPSF quarterfinals, 3-0 vs. Pepperdine in the league semifinals and 3-1 vs. Long Beach State in the MPSF championship match. The Bruins buried IPFW 3-0 in the NCAA semifinals and defeated host Penn State in the championship to capture their 19th NCAA crown under Scates and UCLA’s 98th overall. In the championship match, the Bruins rallied from an eightpoint deficit in Game 2 to win their second NCAA title at Penn State (the first came in 1982). Damien Scott and Dennis Gonzalez were named to the All-Tournament team, and Steve Klosterman, who had battled back from shoulder surgery the previous season, was named Most Outstanding Player. The Bruins’ 26-12 overall record represented the most losses by a national champion.
UCLA cruised through the MPSF schedule with a perfect 12-0 mark, its first unblemished league record since the 1995 squad went 19-0, and then followed up with its first MPSF Tournament title since 2006 to earn the top-seed into the NCAA Tournament. The Bruins proceeded to sweep Long Beach State in the NCAA semfinals to record their 21st 3-0 win of the year, the most since 1995. UCLA was then looking at a rematch with a Hawai’i squad, the two-time defending NCAA champs, that had defeated the Bruins in four sets in Honolulu earlier in the season. The Bruins rallied from a 20-23 first-set deficit to begin the title quest with a 28-26 win. In set two, UH overcame a 19-13 deficit to take the second set 33-31. The Bruins took control of sets three and four midway through both frames and finished with back-to-back 25-21 wins to bring home the crown. Alex Knight, who tied his career-high with 15 kills in the title match, was chosen as the Most Outstanding Player while Ido David (23 kills) and Troy Gooch (15 digs) were named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team. UCLA closed out the season with 12 straight victories on the way to winning title No. 20 and the first under head coach John Speraw, who was named 2023 AVCA Coach of the Year.
The top-seeded UCLA men’s volleyball team won the 2024 Men’s National Collegiate Volleyball Championship in four sets on Saturday over No. 2 seed Long Beach State in Walter Pyramid. Scores of the match were 25-21, 25-20, 27-29, 25-21. The victory brought home NCAA men’s volleyball championship No. 21 for the program and produced the first back-to-back titles by the Bruins since the 1995 and 1996 seasons, as well as the 122nd overall NCAA title for the school across all sports. The loss snapped a 27-match home court win streak by Long Beach dating back to a Feb. 2023 win by the Bruins. With the win, the Bruins ended the season with wins in 15 of the last 16 matches on the way to the title. UCLA Head Coach John Speraw won his fifth NCAA men’s volleyball title as a collegiate head coach – 2024 and 2023 at UCLA; also 2007, 2009, 2012 while at UC Irvine. He helped win three more titles as a UCLA men’s volleyball assistant coach – 1996, 1998, 2000 – and also brought home two trophies as a Bruin men’s volleyball player in 1993 and 1995 for coach Al Scates.
1. Oklahoma State Wrestling - 34 (first title in 1928, last in 2006)
(DIV. I - AS Of 2024)
2. USC Men’s Outdoor Track and Field - 26 (first title in 1926, last in 1976)
3. Denver Skiing - 24 (first title in 1954, last in 2018)
Iowa Wrestling - 24 (first title in 1975, last in 2021)
5. North Carolina Women’s Soccer - 21 (first title in 1982, last in 2012)
Yale Men’s Golf - 21 (first title in 1897, last in 1943)
USC Men’s Tennis - 21 (first title in 1946, last in 2014)
Arkansas Men’s Indoor Track and Field - 21 (first title in 1984, last in 2024)
UCLA Men’s Volleyball - 21 (first title in 1970, last in 2023)
10. Stanford women’s tennis - 20 (first title in 1982, last in 2019)
UCLA has appeared in 29 overall NCAA Tournaments and posted a record of 59-11 (.851). The Bruins have posted a 28-3 (.903) record in Pauley Pavilion NCAA Tournament matches and UCLA is 21-8 (.741) overall in NCAA title matches.
1970 NCAA Championship at UCLA Round Robin Play: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-6, 15-10
UCLA d. Ball State, 15-4, 15-6
UCLA d. Long Beach State, 15-12, 13-15, 15-2
Semifinals: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-10, 15-13, 15-8 Championship: UCLA d. Long Beach State, 15-7, 15-4, 15-8
1971 NCAA Championship at UCLA Round Robin Play: UCLA d. Springfield, 15-3, 15-4
UCLA d. Ball State, 15-7, 15-12
UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-11, 14-16, 15-9
Semifinals: UCLA d. Springfield, 15-6, 15-1, 15-3 Championship: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-6, 17-15, 17-15
1972 NCAA Championship at Ball State Round Robin Play: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-13, 15-7 San Diego State d. UCLA, 15-7, 15-11
UCLA d. Ball State 15-1, 15-4
Semifinals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-9, 15-9, 12-15, 15-12 Championship: UCLA d. San Diego State, 10-15, 9-15, 15-9, 15-10, 15-7
1974 NCAA Championship at UC Santa Barbara Semifinals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-10, 15-9, 15-9 Championship: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 10-15, 15-8, 10-15, 15-11, 15-12
1975 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-1, 15-11, 15-8 Championship: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-9, 7-15, 15-9, 15-10
1976 NCAA Championship at Ball State Semifinals: UCLA d. Springfield, 15-4, 15-2, 15-5 Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 18-16, 15-9, 15-11
1978 NCAA Championship at Ohio State Semifinals: UCLA d. Rutgers-Newark, 15-11, 15-8, 15-8 Championship: Pepperdine d. UCLA, 15-12, 11-15, 15-8, 5-15, 15-12
1979 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-3, 15-1, 15-4 Championship: UCLA d. USC, 12-15, 15-12, 15-11, 15-7
1980 NCAA Championship at Ball State Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-8, 15-7, 15-7 Championship: USC d. UCLA, 15-7, 6-15, 15-3, 15-8
1981 NCAA Championship at UC Santa Barbara Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-8, 15-7, 15-9 Championship: UCLA d. USC, 11-15, 15-7, 15-11, 8-15, 15-13
1982 NCAA Championship at Penn State Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-10, 15-12, 15-7 Championship: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-4, 15-9, 15-7
1983 NCAA Championship at Ohio State Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-4, 15-5, 15-4 Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 15-10, 16-14, 15-7
1984 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-8, 15-4, 15-6 Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 15-11, 15-13, 16-18, 15-12
1987 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-7, 15-10, 15-11 Championship: UCLA d. USC, 15-11, 15-2, 16-14
1989 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-6, 15-4, 15-9 Championship: UCLA d. Stanford, 15-1, 15-13, 4-15, 15-12
1993 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-4, 15-4, 15-2 Championship: UCLA d. CSUN, 15-8, 15-11, 15-10
1994 NCAA Championship at IPFW Semifinals: UCLA d. IPFW, 15-3, 15-8, 15-4 Championships: Penn State d. UCLA, 9-15, 15-13, 4-15, 15-12, 15-12
1995 NCAA Championship at Springfield, MA Semifinals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-12, 15-9, 15-10 Championship: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-3, 15-10, 15-10
1996 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Lewis, 15-7, 15-8, 15-10 Championship: UCLA d. Hawaii, 15-13, 12-15, 9-15, 17-15, 15-12
1997 NCAA Championship at Ohio State Semifinals: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-13, 13-15, 15-4, 10-15, 15-10 Championship: Stanford d. UCLA, 15-7, 15-10, 9-15, 6-15, 15-13
1998 NCAA Championship at Hawai’i Semifinals: UCLA d. Lewis, 13-15, 15-9, 15-6, 13-15, 15-11 Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 15-11, 15-11, 15-7
2000 NCAA Championship at IPFW Semifinals: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-11, 15-8, 15-10
Championship: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-8, 15-10, 17-15
2001 NCAA Championship at Long Beach State Semifinals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 30-21, 30-20, 22-30, 30-24
Championship: BYU d. UCLA, 26-30, 26-30, 30-32
2005 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifinals: UCLA d. Penn State, 30-20, 30-24, 30-27
Championship: Pepperdine d. UCLA, 30-23, 23-30, 24-30, 30-25, 15-10
2006 NCAA Championship at Penn State Semifinals: UCLA d. IPFW, 30-25, 30-23, 30-28
Championship: UCLA d. Penn State, 30-27, 30-27, 30-27
2016 NCAA Championship at Penn State Semifinals: Ohio State d. UCLA, 22-25, 25-22, 25-21, 20-25, 18-16
2018 NCAA Championship at UCLA
Opening Round: UCLA d. Harvard, 23-25, 25-21, 25-11, 25-21
Semifinals: UCLA d. BYU, 25-22, 24-26, 29-27, 25-19
Championship: Long Beach State d. UCLA 25-19, 23-25, 20-25, 26-24, 15-12
2022 NCAA Championship at UCLA
Opening Round: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 25-23, 22-25, 26-24, 25-19
Semifinals: Long Beach State d. UCLA 18-25, 18-25, 25-15, 25-10. 16-14
2023 NCAA Championship at George Mason Semifinals: Long Beach State d. UCLA 25-16, 25-14, 25-19
Championship: UCLA d. Hawai’i 28-26, 31-33, 25-21, 25-21
2024 NCAA Championship at Long Beach State Quarterfinals: UCLA d. Fort Valley State, 25-14, 25-15, 25-15
Semifinals: UCLA d. UC Irvine, 22-25, 25-20, 25-16, 18-25, 15-12
Championship: UCLA d. Long Beach State, 25-21, 25-20, 27-29, 25-21
2025 NCAA Championship at Ohio State Quarterfinals: UCLA d. Belmont Abbey, 25-18, 25-21, 25-19
Semifinals: UCLA d. Hawai’i, 25-14, 25-23, 25-23
Championship: Long Beach State d. UCLA, 25-17, 25-23, 25-21



1970 (24-1)
Dane Holtzman (c)
Ed Machado
1971 (29-1) Larry Griebenow
Ed Machado (c) (2)
1972 (27-7) Larry Griebenow (2)
Jim Menges
1974 (30-5) John Bekins
Jim Menges (2)
1975 (27-8) John Bekins (c) (2)
1976 (15-2) Dave Olbright
Peter Ashley
1979 (30-0) Karch Kiraly
Sinjin Smith (c)
1981 (32-3) Karch Kiraly (c) (2)
Ricci Luyties
1982 (29-0)
1983 (27-4)
1984 (38-0)
Karch Kiraly (c) (3)
Ricci Luyties (2)
Ricci Luyties (3)
Wally Martin
Ricci Luyties (c) (4)
Wally Martin (2)
Andy Klussman
1987 (38-3) Matt Sonnichsen
1989 (29-5)
Matt Sonnichsen (2)
1993 (24-3) Mike Sealy (c)
1995 (31-1)
Stein Metzger
1996 (26-5) Stein Metzger (c) (2)
1998 (28-4) Brandon Taliaferro
2000 (29-5) Brandon Taliaferro (c) (2)
Matt Davis, libero
2006 (26-12) Dennis Gonzalez
Matt Wade
Tony Ker, libero
2023 (31-2) Andrew Rowan
Ethan Champlin
Troy Gooch, libero
2024 (26-5) Andrew Rowan
Ethan Champlin
Matthew Aziz, libero
Kirk Kilgour
Ed Becker
Kirk Kilgour (2)
Dick Irvin (2)
John Zajec
Jeff Jacobs
Chris Irvin
Denny Cline
Chris Irvin (2)
Denny Cline (2)
Doug Brooks, Doug Rabe
Denny Cline (c) (3)
Rick Amon
Steve Salmons
Steve Gulnac
Doug Partie
Steve Salmons (2)
Dave Mochalski
Doug Partie (2)
Doug Partie (3)
Steve Gulnac (c) (2)
Doug Partie (4)
Asbjorn Volstad
Don Dendinger
Trevor Schirman
Trevor Schirman (2)
Mike Whitcomb
Tim Kelly
Jeff Nygaard
John Speraw
Jeff Nygaard (2)
Tom Stillwell
James Turner
Tom Stillwell (c) (2)
Adam Naeve
Scott Morrow
Seth Burnham
David Russell
Nick Scheftic
Merrick McHenry
Guy Genis
Dick Irvin
Bruce Herring
Bob Leonard
Bruce Herring (2)
Bob Leonard (2)
Dick Irvin (c) (3)
Bob Leonard (c) (3)
Mike Normand
Joe Mica
John Herren, Fred Sturm
Joe Mica, Mike Gottschall
Fred Sturm (2)
KC Keller
Peter Ehrmen, Joe Mica (3)
Dave Saunders
Rick Amon (2)
Peter Ehrmen (2)
Dave Saunders (2)
Mark Kinnison, Reed Sunahara
Roger Clark
Reed Sunahara (2)
Roger Clark (2)
Reed Sunahara (3)
Ozzie Volstad (c) (2), Arne Lamberg
Jeff Williams
Matt Whitaker, Carl Henkel
Bill Suwara, Oren Sher, Anthony Curci (c)
Erik Sullivan
Kevin Wong, Dan Landry, Mike Diehl
Kevin Wong (2), Paul Nihipali
Erik Sullivan (c) (2)
Fred Robins, Paul Nihipali (2)
Brian Wells
Fred Robins (2), Evan Thatcher
Ben Moselle
Evan Thatcher (2), Ed Ratledge, Mark
Williams, Cameron Mount, Matt Komer
Paul George
Steve Klosterman
Damien Scott (c)
Alex Knight (c)
Ido David
Merrick McHenry
Guy Genis
Alex Knight, libero (c)
Ido David
1963–Jim Adomali, John Carmack, Al Scates and Steve Drummy
1964–James Calonico, Andy Schutz, Steve Burian, Tom Barr and Ernie Suwara
1965–Steve Burian, Keith Erickson, Phil Lingman, Bill Pearlman, Larry Rundle, Ernie Suwara and Andy Schutz
1966–Ernie Suwara, Larry Rundle, Greg Miller and Steve Eddy
1967–Andy Banachowski, Greg Miller, Ernie Suwara and Robert Becker
1968–Mike Allio, Andy Banachowski and Mike McCann
1969–Kirk Kilgour, Toshi Toyoda, Dane Holtzman and Bruce Herring
1977–Steve Suttich, Joe Mica and Doug Rabe

1978–Dave Olbright, Steve Salmons, Sinjin Smith and Doug Rabe
1979–Steve Salmons, Peter Ehrman, Karch Kiraly, Rick Amon, Sinjin Smith and K.C. Keller
1980–Karch Kiraly, Steve Gulnac and Peter Ehrman

1981–Karch Kiraly and Steve Gulnac
1982–Karch Kiraly, Doug Partie and Dave Saunders
1983–1st team:Steve Gulnac, Ricci Luyties, Doug Partie and Reed Sunahara; Honorable mention:Wally Martin
1984–1st team: Ricci Luyties, Doug Partie and Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Reed Sunahara
1985–1st team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Tim Otterman and Dan Vrebalovich
1986–2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad; Honorable mention:Jeff Willams and Arne Lamberg
1987–Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Asbjorn Volstad; 1st team: Jeff Williams; 2nd team: Matt Sonnichsen; 3rd team: Don Dendinger; Honorable mention: Arne Lamberg; Freshman of the Year: Trevor Schirman
1988–1st team: Don Dendinger; 3rd team: Matt Sonnichsen; Honorable mention: Trevor Schirman
1989 –Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Trevor Schirman; 1st team: Matt Sonnichsen; 3rd team: Mike Whitcomb; Honorable Mention: Anthony Curci
1990 –1st team: Trevor Schirman; 2nd team: Mike Whitcomb
1991–1st team: Mike Sealy; 3rd team: Carl Henkel; Honorable mention: Mike Whitcomb; Freshman team: David Swatik.
1992–Asics/Volleyball Monthly 2nd team: Dan Landry; 3rd team: Mike Sealy, Freshman of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; All-Freshman team: Erik Sullivan; AVCA 2nd team: Dan Landry.
1993–Asics/Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Mike Sealy; 1st team: Jeff Nygaard; 3rd team: Dan Landry; Honorable mention: Kevin Wong. AVCA 1st team: Jeff Nygaard and Mike Sealy.
1994–Asics/Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Erik Sullivan; 3rd team: Kevin Wong; Honorable mention: Paul Nihipali; All-Freshman Team: Paul Nihipali. AVCA Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Kevin Wong and Erik Sullivan.
1995–Asics/Volleyball Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Stein Metzger and Erik Sullivan; 3rd team: Paul Nihipali. AVCA Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 1st team: Stein Metzger; 2nd team: Paul Nihipali and Erik Sullivan.
1996–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Stein Metzger; 2nd team: Paul Nihipali; All-Freshman team: James Turner. AVCA Co-Player of the Year: Stein Metzger; 1st team: Stein Metzger and Paul Nihipali.
1997–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Paul Nihipali; 2nd team: Tom Stillwell; 3rd team: Brandon Taliaferro; Honorable mention: Adam Naeve; All-Freshman team: Adam Naeve, Brando Taliaferro. Freshman of the Year: Taliaferro. AVCA 1st team: Paul Nihipali; 2nd team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Taliaferro.
1998–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Adam Naeve; 3rd team: Tom Stillwell; Honorable mention: Ben Moselle. AVCA 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Adam Naeve; 2nd team: Ben Moselle.
1999–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Adam Naeve; 3rd team: Danny Farmer. AVCA 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Adam Naeve.
2000–Asics/Volleyball Player of the Year: Brandon Taliaferro; Libero of the Year: Matt Davis; 3rd team: Mark Williams, 3rd Team. AVCA 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro.
2001–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Adam Naeve; 2nd team: Mark Williams; Honorable mention: Adam Shrader. AVCA 1st team: Adam Naeve and Mark Williams.
2002–Asics/Volleyball Libero of the Yera: Adam Shrader; 2nd team: Matt Komer; Honorable mention: Chris Peña. AVCA 2nd team: Matt Komer.
2004–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of the Year: Adam Shrader; Honorable mention: Paul Johnson and Chris Peña. AVCA 1st team: Adam Shrader; 2nd team: Chris Peña.
2005–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Paul Johnson; 2nd team: Tony Ker. AVCA 1st team: Paul Johnson.
2006–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; Spike/ Volleyball 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; 3rd team: Tony Ker; Honorable mention: Nick Scheftic and Paul George.
2007–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman. Spike/ Volleyball 1st team: Tony Ker; 3rd team: Steve Klosterman. AVCA 1st team: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman.


2008–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Garrett Muagututia. AVCA 1st team: Tony Ker.
2009–Asics/Volleyball Honorable mention: Garrett Muagututia.
2010–AVCA/Volleyball 2nd team: Garrett Muagututia.
2012–AVCA/Volleyball 1st team: Thomas Amberg and Kyle Caldwell; 2nd team: Weston Dunlap.
2013–AVCA/Volleyball 1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Spencer Rowe and Evan Mottram.
2014–AVCA 1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; Honorable mention: Spencer Rowe and Robart Page. Volleyball Magazine 3rd team: Gonzalo Quiroga.
2015–AVCA Honorable mention: JT Hatch. Off the Block Freshman of the Year: JT Hatch.
2016–AVCA 1st team: Micah Ma’a; 2nd team: Jake Arnitz and Mitch Stahl; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Micah Ma’a.
2017–AVCA 2nd team: Jake Arnitz; Honorable mention: Mitch Stahl; Volleyballmag.com 2nd team: Jake Arnitz, Mitch Stahl; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Daenan Gyimah.
2018–AVCA 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Jake Arnitz, JT Hatch and Christian Hessenauer; Volleyballmag.com 1st team: Daenan Gyimah, Micah Ma’a; 2nd team: Jake Arnitz; Hon. Mention: Christian Hessenauer; VolleyMob 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Christian Hessenauer.
2019–AVCA 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Volleyballmag.com 1st team: Daenan Gyimah, Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Dylan Missry, Cole Pender.
2020–AVCA 1st team: Daenan Gyimah; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Cole Ketrzynski and Mads Kyed Jensen.
2021–AVCA Honorable Mention: Cole Ketrzynski, Sam Kobrine, Merrick McHenry; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Ethan Champlin.
2022–AVCA 1st team: Ethan Champlin, Merrick McHenry, Miles Partain; 2nd team: Guy Genis, Kevin Kobrine; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Guy Genis
2023–AVCA 1st team: Ethan Champlin, Merrick McHenry, Ido David, Andrew Rowan; 2nd team: Alex Knight; Honorable mention: Guy Genis, Troy Gooch; AVCA Newcomer of the Year: Andrew Rowan; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Andrew Rowan.
2024–AVCA 1st team: Ethan Champlin, Merrick McHenry, Andrew Rowan, Honorable mention: Grant Sloane, Cooper Robinson
2025–AVCA 1st team: Cooper Robinson, Andrew Rowan, Cameron Thorne; 2nd Team: Zach Ram
*Collegiate All-America honors awarded by Volleyball Magazine, Volleyball News, Volleyball Monthly, Volleyball, Spike/Volleyball, Off the Block, VolleyMob or the American Volleyball Coaches Assn. (AVCA).
Jeff Nygaard; All-Freshman Team: Erik Sullivan.
1993–1st team: Jeff Nygaard and Mike Sealy; Hon. mention: Kevin Wong.

1970–Dane Holtzman*, Ed Becker and Kirk Kilgour
1971–Kirk Kilgour†, Larry Griebenow and Ed Machado
1972–Dick Irvin* and John Zajec
1974–Bob Leonard*, Jim Menges and Mike Normand
1975–John Bekins*, John Herren and Joe Mica
1976–Joe Mica*, Denny Cline, Dave Olbright and Fred Sturm
1978–Dave Olbright, Steve Salmons and Sinjin Smith
1979–Sinjin Smith*, Peter Ehrman, Joe Mica and Steve Salmons
1980–Steve Gulnac and Karch Kiraly
1981–Karch Kiraly*, Steve Salmons and Steve Gulnac
1982–Karch Kiraly*, Dave Saunders, Doug Partie and Dave Mochalski
1983–Ricci Luyties*, Wally Martin, Doug Partie and Steve Gulnac
1984–Ricci Luyties*, Doug Partie, Roger Clark and Asbjorn Volstad
1987–Asbjorn Volstad*, Arne Lamberg and Jeff Williams
1989–Matt Sonnichsen*, Anthony Curci, Trevor Schirman and Matt Whitaker
1993–Jeff Nygaard† and Mike Sealy†, Kevin Wong and Dan Landry
1994–Jeff Nygaard, Erik Sullivan and Paul Nihipali
1995–Jeff Nygaard*, Stein Metzger and John Speraw
1996–Stein Metzger and Tom Stillwell
1997–Paul Nihipali and Adam Naeve
1998–Adam Naeve*, Brandon Taliaferro and Fred Robins
2000–Brandon Taliaferro*, Seth Burnham and Evan Thatcher
2001–Adam Naeve and Scott Morrow
2005–Paul Johnson and Jonathan Acosta
2006–Steve Klosterman*, Damien Scott and Dennis Gonzalez
2016–Jake Arnitz
2018–Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a
2022–Ethan Champlin
2023-Alex Knight*, Ido David, Troy Gooch
2024-Ethan Champlin*, Merrick McHenry, Andrew Rowan
2025-Zach Rama, Cooper Robinson
*Most Outstanding Player. †Co-Most Outstanding Player. ALL-CONfERENCE SELECtIONS, 1975-pRESENt
1975–1st team: John Bekins; 2nd team: John Herren and Joe Mica.
1976–1st team: Joe Mica, Dave Olbright and Fred Sturm; 2nd team: Denny Cline; 3rd team: Peter Ashley.
1977–1st team: Joe Mica and Steve Suttich; 2nd team: Dave Olbright and Doug Rabe; Hon. mention: Sinjin Smith.
1978–1st team: Dave Olbright* and Steve Salmons; 2nd team: Sinjin Smith and Doug Rabe; Hon. mention: Peter Ehrman.
1979–1st team: Steve Salmons* and Sinjin Smith; 2nd team: Rick Amon; 2nd team: Peter Ehrman and Karch Kiraly.
1980–1st team: Karch Kiraly*, Peter Ehrman and Steve Gulnac; Hon. mention: Dave Saunders and Randy Stoklos.
1981–1st team: Karch Kiraly* and Steve Gulnac; 2nd team: Dave Saunders and Rick Amon; Hon. mention: Peter Ehrman.
1982–1st team: Karch Kiraly*, Dave Saunders*, Doug Partie* and Ricci Luyties; 2nd team: Dave Mochalski.
1983–1st team: Ricci Luyties and Doug Partie; 2nd team: Steve Gulnac and Reed Sunahara; Hon. mention: Roger Clark.
1984–1st team: Ricci Luyties; 2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad.
1985–1st team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Tim Otterman and Dan Vrebalovich.
1986–2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad; 3rd team: Jeff Williams; Hon. mention: Arne Lamberg.
1987–Player of the Year: Asbjorn Volstad; 1st Team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Arne Lamberg, Matt Sonnichsen and Jeff Williams; 3rd team: Don Dendinger.
1988–1st team: Don Dendinger; 2nd team: Matt Sonnichsen; Hon. mention: Trevor Schirman.
1989–1st team: Trevor Schirman and Matt Sonnichsen; 3rd team: Mike Whitcomb.
1990–1st team: Trevor Schirman.
1991–2nd team: Carl Henkel and Mike Sealy.
1992–2nd team: Dan Landry and Mike Sealy; 3rd team: Jeff Nygaard, Freshman of the Year:
1994–Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 1st Team: Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Erik Sullivan; 3rd team: Kevin Wong and Paul Nihipali; Hon. mention: Tim Kelly and Stein Metzger.
1995–Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 1st team: Jeff Nygaard and Paul Nihipali; 2nd team: Stein Metzger; 3rd team: Erik Sullivan.
1996–Player of the Year: Stein Metzger; 1st team:Paul Nihipali; Hon. mention: Tom Stillwell.
1997–1st team: Paul Nihipali and Tom Stillwell; 3rd team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Taliaferro; Freshman of the Year: Brandon Taliaferro.
1998–1st team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Taliaferro; 2nd team: Ben Moselle; 3rd team: Tom Stillwell.
1999–1st team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Taliaferro; 2nd team: Danny Farmer; 3rd team: Mark Williams; Hon. mention: Fred Robins.
2000–1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Matt Davis (Libero); 3rd team: Mark Williams and Scott Morrow.
2001–2nd team: Adam Naeve, Mark Williams and Adam Shrader (Libero); Hon. mention: Scott Morrow and Rich Nelson.
2002–1st team: Adam Shrader (Libero); 2nd team: Matt Komer; 3rd team: Cameron Mount, Rich Nelson; Hon. mention: Chris Peña and Scott Morrow.
2003–3rd team: Adam Shrader (Libero) and Chris Peña; Hon. mention: Jonathan Acosta and Rich Nelson.
2004–1st team: Adam Shrader (Libero); 2nd team: Chris Peña; 3rd team: Paul Johnson; Hon. mention: Dennis Gonzalez, Steve Klosterman and Kris Kraushaar.
2005–1st team: Paul Johnson and Tony Ker (Libero); Hon. mention: Kris Kraushaar and Allan Vince.
2006–3rd team: Tony Ker (Libero); Hon. mention: Steve Klosterman.
2007–1st team: Tony Ker (Libero); 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; 3rd team: Paul George.
2008–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia; 3rd team:Tony Ker (Libero); Hon. mention: Jamie Diefenbach, Sean O’Malley, and D.J. Stromath.
2009–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia; Hon. mention: Thomas Amberg.
2010–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia.
2011–2nd team: Weston Dunlap and Gonzalo Quiroga; Hon. mention: Thomas Amberg.
2012–1st team: Thomas Amberg, Kyle Caldwell and Weston Dunlap; 2nd team: Gonzalo Quiroga; Hon. mention: Evan Mottram (Libero).
2013–1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Dane Worley and Spencer Rowe; Hon. mention: Evan Mottram (Libero) and Robart Page.
2014–1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Spencer Rowe and Robart Page; All-Freshman team: Jackson Bantle (Libero) and Mitch Stahl.
2015–2nd team: JTHatch; Hon. mention: Mitch Stahl and Trent Kersten; Freshman of the Year: JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Jake Arnitz.
2016–1st team: Micah Ma’a and Jake Arnitz; 2nd team: Mitch Stahl; Hon. mention: Hagen Smith and JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Micah Ma’a.
2017–1st team: Mitch Stahl and Jake Arnitz; Hon. mention: Micah Ma’a, Daenan Gyimah, and JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Daenan Gyiman.
2018– 1st team: Jake Arnitz, Daenan Gyimah, Micah Ma’a and Christian Hessenauer; 2nd team: JT Hatch and Dylan Missry; Hon. mention: Oliver Martin.
2019– 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; All-Freshman team: Cole Pender and Adam Parks.
2020– 1st team: Daenan Gyimah; 2nd team: Cole Ketrzynski; Hon. mention: Mads Kyed Jensen and Austin Matautia; All-Freshman team: Cole Ketrzynski and Mads Kyed Jensen. 2021– 1st team: Cole Ketrzynski and Sam Kobrine; 2nd team: Merrick McHenry; Hon. mention: Austin Matautia; All-Freshman team: Ethan Champlin and Merrick McHenry.
2022 – Player of the Year: Miles Partain; 1st team: Miles Partain, Ethan Champlin, Kevin Kobrine, Merrick McHenry; 2nd team: Guy Genis; Hon. mention: Ido David; Freshman of the Year: Guy Genis; All-Freshman team: Guy Genis, Ido David and Grant Sloane.
2023 – 1st team: Ethan Champlin, Merrick McHenry, Alex Knight, Andrew Rowan, Ido David; Hon. mention: Guy Genis; Freshman of the Year: Andrew Rowan; All-Freshman team: Andrew Rowan and Zach Rama.
2024 – 1st team: Ethan Champlin, Merrick McHenry, Andrew Rowan; 2nd-team Grant Sloane, Cooper Robinson; Hon. mention: Sean McQuiggan; Player of the Year: Merrick McHenry
2025 – 1st team: Zach Rama, Andrew Rowan, Cooper Robinson, Cameron Thorne; HM: Sean Kelly *Unanimous selections. †Player of the Year. HM–Honorable Mention.



mVB
1983 Ricci Luyties, UCLA
1984 Ricci Luyties, UCLA
1985 Bob Ctvrtlik, Pepperdine
1986 Adam Johnson, USC
1987 Ozzie Volstad, UCLA
1988 Tom Duke, USC
1989 Trevor Schirman, UCLA
1990 Bryan Ivie, USC
1991 Bryan Ivie, USC
1992 Brent Hilliard, LBS
1993 Michael Sealy, UCLA/Canyon Ceman, Stanford
1994 Jeff Nygaard, UCLA
1995 Jeff Nygaard, UCLA
1996 Stein Metzger, UCLA/ Yuval Katz, Hawaii
1997 Ivan Contreras, Penn State
1998 George Roumain, Pepperdine
1999 Ryan Millar, BYU/George Roumain, Pepperdine
2000 Brandon Taliaferro, UCLA/Donald Suxho, USC
2001 Costas Theocharidis, Hawaii
2002 Brad Keenan, Pepperdine
2003 Costas Theocharidis, Hawaii
2004 Carlos Moreno, BYU
2005 Sean Rooney, Pepperdine
2006 Jayson Jablonsky, UCI
2007 Jonathan Winder, Pepperdine
2008 Jonathan Winder, Pepperdine/ Matt Anderson, Penn St./Paul Lotman Long Beach St.
2009 Paul Carroll, Pepperdine
2010 Kawika Shoji, Stanford
2011 Murphy Troy, USC
2012 Tony Ciarelli, USC
2013 Taylor Crabb, Long Beach State
2014 Taylor Sander, BYU
2015 Thomas Jaeschke, Loyola-Chi.
2016 Nicolas Szerszen, Ohio State
2017 TJ DeFalco, Long Beach State
2018 TJ DeFalco & Josh Tuaniga, Long Beach St.
2019 TJ DeFalco, Long Beach St.
2020 Gabi Garcia Fernandez, BYU
2021 Rado Parapunov, Hawai’i
2022 Alex Nikolov, Long Beach State
2023 Jakob Thelle, Hawai’i
2024 Merrick McHenry, UCLA
*Named by Volleyball Monthly or Volleyball Magazine or AVCA (which merged in 1995) or AVCA


Ed Machado, 1970-71*
Karch Kiraly, 1981-82*
Asbjorn Volstad, 1986-87*
Trong Nguyen, 1996-97*#
Ed Ratledge, 1999-2000#
Danny Farmer, 1999-2000*
Scott Morrow, 2002-03†^
Adam Shrader, 2002-04^
J.T. Wenger, 2004^
Jonathan Acosta, 2005^
David Russell, 2006^
Eric Chaghouri, 2006-07^
Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-08^
Tony Ker, 2006-08^
Ryan Ratelle, 2008-09^
Sean O’Malley, 2009
Jack Polales, 2009-10^
Thomas Amberg, 2010-12^
Dylan Bowermaster, 2010^
Kevin Ker, 2010^
Jeremy Casebeer, 2011-12^
Evan Mottram, 2011-13^
Spencer Rowe, 2011-14#^
Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014^
Jackson Bantle, 2015-17^
Michael Fisher, 2015-17^
Mitch Stahl, 2015-17^
Hagen Smith, 2016-17^
Micah Ma’a, 2017-18-19^
Dylan Missry, 2017-18-19^
John Zappia, 2018*
Grant Maleski, 2019, 21^
Matt Younggren, 2020^
Marcus Partain, 2021^
Cole Power, 2021^
Ian Eschenberg, 2021^
Sam Kobrine, 2021^
Miles Partain, 2022^
Kyle Vom Steeg, 2021-22^
Ethan Champlin, 2022-23^
Guy Genis, 2022-23^
Alex Knight, 2022-23^
J.R. Norris IV, 2023^
*NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship winners. #CoSIDA Academic All-Americans. ^All-MPSF Academic Team. †Pac-10
Postgraduate Scholarship


1955-56, 59 -- Art Alper Rolf Engen
1959, 63-64 -- Mike O’Hara
1959, 63-64 1964 -- Keith Erickson
1964-65 -- Ernie Suwara
1965-67 -- Al Scates
1966-69, 71 -- Larry Rundle
1969 -- Mike Allio
1970-75 -- Kirk Kilgour
1972 -- Ed Machado
1973-77 -- Joe Mica
1975 -- John Zajec
1976 -- Denny Cline
1976-80 -- Dave Olbright
1979, 1981-86 -- Steve Salmons
1979-80 -- Sinjin Smith
1981-89 -- Karch Kiraly
1982 -- Rick Amon
1983 -- Greg Giovanazzi
Steve Gulnac
1983-88 -- Dave Saunders
1984 -- Matt Whitaker
1985 -- Wally Martin
1985-88 -- Ricci Luyties
1985-88, 91-92 -- Doug Partie
1988 -- Arne Lamberg
1989 -- Don Dendinger
1989 -- Jeff Williams
1989-90 -- Matt Sonnichsen
1990-92 -- Trevor Schirman
1990-96 -- Fred Sturm, coach 1993-01 -- Dan Landry
1993-01, 2006-07 -- Jeff Nygaard
1994, ‘97 -- Mike Sealy 1995-99 -- Tom Stillwell
1997-2005 -- Erik Sullivan 1999-2005 -- Adam Naeve
2000-03, 2006-08 -- Brandon Taliaferro 2005-08 -- Allan Vince 2006 -- Gray Garrett
Matt Komer
Kris Kraushaar
Matt McKinney
Damien Scott
2006, ‘08 -- Nick Scheftic
2008 -- Tony Ker
Steve Klosterman
2010-14, 2017-24 -- Garrett Muagututia
2012, 2014 -- Nick Vogel
2013 -- Kyle Caldwell 2019-24-- Micah Ma’a 2019-22 -- Mitch Stahl 2022-23 -- Merrick McHenry





Doug Partie played alongside Ricci Luyties and formed an unbeatable combination. The Bruins won 126 of 133 matches with each of his four seasons resulting in an NCAA title. Partie controlled the net as one of collegiate volleyball’s most feared block - ers—the Bruins established blocking records during his tenure that still stand. He was a three-time all-conference and All-America selection. On the U.S. National Team, he won a gold medal in 1988 and a bronze in 1992. He played professionally in the prestigious Italian League for two seasons and earned league all-star recognition. On the four-man pro beach circuit he earned league all-star honors, and in 1995 led Team Sideout to the regular season championship for which he won MVP honors. Doug was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2017 and was named to the Pac-12 All-Century MVB Team in 2016. Partie’s son Kendall also played volleyball at UCLA.

Sinjin Smith began his UCLA career in 1976 with an NCAA title and finished it by leading the Bruins to their first undefeated season in 1979, for which he was named the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. Smith was a three-time all-conference player, twotime All-American and led the Bruins to a record of 85-9. Smith earned a spot on the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team, but did not compete when the United States boycotted. He then dedicated the rest of his athletic career to beach volleyball, where he ruled the sand with partner Randy Stoklos for more than a decade. The pair won a record 114 open beach tournaments together, more than $1.6 million and was responsible for the tremendous popularity of the sport. In 1996 at age 39, Smith and former Bruin Carl Henkel qualified for the Olympic beach competition and advanced to the semifinals before losing in an epic battle to eventual gold medalists Karch Kiraly and Kent Steffes. In August 2001, Smith retired from the game at the Manhattan Open, a tournament he had won five times. Today, he serves as an ambassador for the game and administrator for the FIVB. Sinjin was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2017. Smith’s oldest son Hagen played on the UCLA team from 2014-17.
#43 • LARRY RUNDLE: 6-1 Detroit, Mich. • Santa Monica HS
#54 • ERNIE SUWARA: 6-2 New York, N. Y. •

Larry Rundle and Ernie Suwara were All-Americans together on some of the great UCLA teams of the 1960s before volleyball became an NCAA sport. Suwara was an Olympian in 1964 before playing at UCLA from 1965-67, and Rundle served as captain of the U.S. Olympic Team in 1968 after his success with the Bruins from 1965-66. Rundle, who played for a pair of UCLA conference championship teams, also played on the U.S. Pan American and World Games teams and was a five-time MVP in the USVBA national championshps from 1966-72. Suwara served as captain of the Bruins in 1967, played for three league championship teams and the Bruins were 72-8 during his college career. On the sand, Rundle won 13 beach tournaments and Suwara won two. Both players were inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in May of 2018. Suwara was named to the Pac-12 MVB All-Century Team in 2016.
Denny Cline lettered at UCLA from 1974-76 and was, in Al Scates’ words, “a player who got more production out of less talent than any I’ve ever coached.” After being cut as a freshman, Cline fought his way into the lineup and the Bruins won three straight NCAA titles. Cline earned NCAA All-Tournament honors as a senior captain in 1976. He went on to play for the U.S. National Team that year and graduated from UCLA in 1977 with a 3.6 grade point average in Political Science. During the 1977 season, he served as a graduate assistant coach, and in 1978 Scates elevated him to full-time status. Cline served two stints and eight seasons as an assistant coach. As a player and assistant coach, he was involved in seven of the Bruins’ first 11 NCAA titles. He coached all three of UCLA’s undefeated teams, played on the Bruins’ second three-peat championship run (1974-76), and coached three-straight national championship teams (1982-84).


Steve Salmons was a three-time All-American, who was selected the Player of the Year in 1978. In 1979, he played on the first undefeated volleyball team in NCAA history alongside fellow Hall of Famer Sinjin Smith. In 1981, after rehabilitating an injury during the regular season, he earned NCAA All-Tournament honors and led the Bruins to their eighth NCAA title. After leaving UCLA, he played for the U.S. National Team with Karch Kiraly until 1986 and helped lead the United States to the triple crown of international volleyball — the Olympic gold medal in 1984, the World Cup Championship in 1985, and the World Championship title in 1986. As a professional beach player, he was a member of the team that won the 1993 Japan Open. His teams also won 12 tournaments on the Budweiser 4-Man Tour from 1993-97. He earned all-league and Best Middle Blocker honors in 1994. Salmons was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in May of 2018. His son, Reece, joined the men’s volleyball team at UCLA for the 2017 season.

Ricci Luyties played for the Bruins from 1981-84 and finished every season with a national championship ring. During two of those seasons, 1982 and 1984, the Bruins went undefeated. They also won 83 straight home matches during his career, compiled a record of 126-7 and won three- straight league titles. Individually, Luyties earned All-America honors twice, all-conference honors three times, and was selected Volleyball Magazine’s Player of the Year and the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player two straight years. He is the only player to receive both of the aforementioned awards two straight seasons. As a member of the U.S. National Team, he played on the 1988 team that won a gold medal in Seoul. On the pro beach circuit, Luyties won seven tournaments, including the 1991 U.S. Championships at Hermosa Beach. Currently, he is the head women’s volleyball coach at UC San Diego. He was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2017 and named to the Pac-12 All-Century MVB Team in 2016.
2021 - Fred Sturm
2020 - Jeff Nygaard
2019 - Kirk Kilgour, Dave Saunders, Rudy Suwara
2018 - Larry Rundle, Steve Salmons, John Speraw, Ernie Suwara
2017 - Andy Banachowski, Rolf Engen, Karch Kirialy, Ricci Luyties, Mike O’Hara, Doug Partie, Al Scates, Sinjin Smith
UCLA’s International Volleyball Hall of Famers
2008 - Randy Stoklos
2003 - Sinjin Smith
2001 - Karch Kiraly
1997 - Andy Banachowski
1994 - Larry Rundle
1993 - Al Scates
1992 - Ron Von Hagen
1991 - Rolf Engen
1989 - Mike O’Hara

Kirk Kilgour was the first volleyball player inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame as a charter member in 1984. As a player, Kilgour enjoyed the distinction of playing on Al Scates’ first two NCAA championship teams. A three-time All-American (USVBA and NCAA), Kilgour’s record was 80-5, including a record of 29-1 in 1971 when he was selected as the NCAA Tournament’s co-Most Outstanding Player. After college, he played for several years on the U.S. National Team and in the Italian professional league before a tragic accident in 1976 ended his volleyball career. Kilgour was an assistant coach at Pepperdine when the Waves won the NCAA title in 1985 and served as head coach from 1979-82. He also worked as a volleyball broadcaster, working several Olympiads. In 1977, Dr. Paul Berns and Al Scates organized the Kilgour Cup in his honor, and the benefit match continued for 35 years. Kilgour died July 10, 2002. He was inducted into the SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in the Class of 2019.

Recruited from a videotape, Asbjorn (Ozzie) Volstad became one of the greatest volleyball players in UCLA history. He arrived on campus from Forde, Norway and quickly earned a starting spot on the three-time defending NCAA championship team in 1984. As a freshman quick hitter, Volstad played on a team that recorded a 38-0 record and captured its fourth consecutive NCAA title. In his career, he was selected an All-America and all-conference player four times (equalled only by Karch Kiraly), and led the Bruins to a pair of NCAA titles. In 1987, his senior season, he swept player of the year honors for Volleyball Magazine, the conference, and the NCAA Tournament as the Bruins boasted an overall record of 38-3, 18-0 in conference play. He also held the UCLA career records for digs (746), kills (1,237) and blocks (337) for several years. Until the Libero position was created, he held the single season digs record of 308 set in 1986. A standout in the classroom, Volstad earned Academic All-America honors twice and was awarded an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship for the 1986-87 year. He was named to the Pac-12 All-Century Team in 2016.

Considered America’s greatest volleyball player, Karch Kiraly has earned nearly every award imaginable in his sport. In addition to being inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame in 1993, he also was inducted into the Volleyball Hall of Fame in Springfield, MA, on Oct. 19, 2001. In Dec. 2000, he was voted Male Volleyball Player of the Century by the FIVB. In 2005, he was inducted into the AVCA Hall of Fame and in January, 2006, he was voted the most influential person in the sport’s first 100 years. In 1984 and ’88, he led the U.S. Olympic Team to a pair of volleyball gold medals and kept the team atop the world rankings for several years with victories in the World Cup, World Championships, and USA Cup. He was voted Most Valuable Player in the Olympics, World Cup, and USA Cup as well as the FIVB’s MVP twice. On the sand, Kiraly was a three-time Beach Volleyball World Champion and won the Olympic gold medal in the inaugural beach volleyball competition in Atlanta. His 148 career open beach victories and his career winnings of more than $3 million rank first on the all-time lists. At UCLA, Kiraly led the Bruins to three NCAA titles, two undefeated seasons, and a record of 126-5. He was a four-time All-American and two-time NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player. In the classroom, he earned Academic All-America honors and the NCAA Top Five Award. Kiraly is currently the Head Coach of the U.S. Women’s National Team which earned a Bronze medal at the 2016 Rio Games. He was inducted into the SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in the Class of 2019. Both of Kiraly’s sons are UCLA graduates. Karch was named to the Pac-12 MVB Player of the Century in 2016.

Mike O’Hara, an outstanding outside hitter, was a UCLA pioneer in the sport and was instrumental in making volleyball a varsity sport at UCLA. In 1953, O’Hara’s championship fraternity volleyball team represented UCLA and won the National Collegiate Championship in Nebraska. The following year, Johns elevated men’s volleyball to varsity status and the Bruins once again captured the championship. In both seasons, O’Hara received All-America honors. After graduating from UCLA, O’Hara played on the USA National Team in 1959, ‘63 and ‘64. He was a member of the 1959 gold medal team at the Pan Am Games and a member of the 1964 Olympic team. O’Hara also competed in U.S. Volleyball Association national tournaments and was named USVBA MVP in 1961 and ‘63. O’Hara and teammate Mike Bright dominated beach tournaments in the 1960s, winning the first five Manhattan Beach Opens. O’Hara was elected to the USA Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1992 and the Beach Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1996. Additionally, O’Hara was Vice-President of the L.A. Olympic Organizing Committee for the 1984 Olympics, and helped negotiate the location of the Olympic Organizing Committee headquarters, later known as the Peter V. Ueberroth building on campus. He was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2017.

Stein Metzger was a standout setter for the Bruins from 1993-96. During his career, UCLA captured four conference titles and three NCAA crowns (93-95-96). Metzger started on two of those national championship teams and earned NCAA All-Tournament honors twice. Metzger ranks second on the UCLA all-time list in set assists, and owns two of the top five UCLA single season marks in set assists. He was named first-team all-conference in 1996 and an AVCA 1st Team All-American in 1995 and 1996. In 1996, he was also honored as conference Player-of-the-Year and the AVCA National co-Player of the Year. Metzger was one of the most colorful and popular players on the AVP circuit. He paired with Jake Gibb to form the 2005 AVP Team of the Year while capturing four event titles, leading the Tour in digs, ranking second in hitting percentage and third in kills. During his beach career, he captured a total of 18 titles (16 domestic, 2 international), won bronze at the 2001 Goodwill Games and silver at the 2003 FIVB World Championships. Metzger was also a 2004 Olympian in Beach Volleyball where he and partner Dax Holdren finished fifth. Metzger served as UCLA’s beach volleyball coach and led his squad to the 2018 and 2019 NCAA Championships. He was named to the Pac-12 MVB All-Century Team in 2016.

Dave Saunders, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, played on UCLA men’s volleyball teams which compiled an overall record of 124-5 and captured three NCAA championships (1979, 1981 and 1982). The 1979 UCLA men’s volleyball squad was the sport’s first to complete an undefeated season, going 30-0. The 1982 squad also posted an undefeated record (29-0) on its way to the national championship. Saunders’ Bruin teams also produced a perfect 49-0 record in Pauley Pavilion matches. Saunders, who earned a gold medal for the U.S. playing in the 1984 and 1988 Olympic Games, was honored as first-team All-America selection in 1982. He was recognized on the all-conference teams in 1982, 1981 and 1980. Saunders was inducted into the SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2019.

A two-sport star, Danny Farmer excelled on both the gridiron and the volleyball court and was inducted in the Class of 2015. He started his career as a football walk-on and finished as UCLA’s alltime leader in receiving yards with 3,020. Farmer became the first freshman in school history to lead the team in receptions. During his junior year, he earned first-team All-Pac-10 acclaim after setting a school record with 1,274 receiving yards and averaging 106.2 yards per game. During his senior season, he was named a preseason All-American and a UCLA team captain and won the Red Sanders Award as the team’s Offensive MVP. He also earned an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship and won the Pac-10 Conference Medal. Farmer was drafted in the fourth round of the 2000 NFL Draft. Farmer was just as prodigious in volleyball, helping lead UCLA to NCAA Championships in 1996 and 1998 and earning All-America honors in 1999. He played a big role in UCLA’s 1998 NCAA semifinal victory, coming off the bench to ignite a rally that turned the match around and finishing with a season-high 26 kills and four blocks. During his senior season, he was amongst the nation’s leaders in attack percentage, hitting .444. Farmer joins his father George, a 2000 inductee, in the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame.

Jeff Nygaard starred at UCLA for four seasons (1992-95). He made an immediate impact in Westwood and was named both conference and NCAA Freshman of the Year in 1992. Nygaard helped the Bruins to the 1993 NCAA title, setting a championship record by hitting .867 against Ohio State in the semifinals. He was named the 1993 NCAA Championship’s co-Most Outstanding Player. In 1994, he set UCLA records with 650 kills while averaging 6.98 kills per game. The Bruins advanced to the championship match and Nygaard made the NCAA All-Tournament Team. In 1995, Nygaard helped lead the Bruins to a 31-1 record, an undefeated league record and was named Most Outstanding Player in the NCAA Tournament. For three straight seasons (1993-95), Nygaard received all-conference and first-team All-America honors as well as being honored as the consensus National Player of the Year in 1994 and 1995. For his career, Nygaard ranks in the Top 10 in kills, blocks, aces, digs, block average, kills average and hitting %. Nygaard played on the U.S. National Team from 1993-2000 and represented the United States in three Olympiads. In 2001, he joined the AVP, won a total of six events in his career, was named the 2003 AVP Most Valuable Player and AVP Team of the Year with partner Dain Blanton. Nygaard was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in 2020. He was named to the Pac-12 MVB All-Century Team in 2016.

Adam Naeve played quick hitter for the Bruins in the 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2001 seasons. He was named Most Outstanding Player at the 1998 NCAA Championship Tournament after producing 23 kills on a .629 hitting percentage while leading UCLA to the national title. Naeve was a first-team All-America selection in 1998, 1999 and 2001 and a second-team choice in 1997. He earned NCAA All-Tournament honors in 1997, 1998 and 2001.
A first-team all-conference selection in 1998, 1999 and 2001, he played with the U.S. National team from 1999-2005. Naeve still ranks among school’s top 5 all-time in kills, blocks, aces and kills per game average.

Paul Nihipali, a four-time All-American was inducted in the Class of 2015 after finishing his career as UCLA volleyball’s all-time kills leader with 2,096 and is still the only Bruin ever to surpass 2,000 career kills. He also holds school records for most kills in a single match (52) and in a season (650 in 1997), as well as career kills per game (5.40). Nihipali helped lead UCLA to back-to-back NCAA Championships in 1995 and 1996 and to runner-up finishes in 1994 and 1997. He was named to the All-Tournament team at the NCAA Championships from 1995-97 and earned firstteam All-MPSF honors three times and first-team All-America acclaim in 1996 and 1997. Nihipali went on to play for the U.S. National Team from 1995-97 before embarking on a film career. He wrote, produced and directed a feature film, Beach Kings, and has producd a reality television show. He was named to the Pac-12 MVB All-Century Team in 2016.

One of the best setters in collegiate volleyball history, Brandon Taliaferro led UCLA to NCAA Championships in 1998 and 2000 and finished his career as the Bruins’ all-time leader in set assists with 6,840. Taliaferro also owns school records for single-season (1,848 in 1998) and single-match (110 in 1998) set assists and ranks No. 3 in career aces (176), No. 3 in career digs (831) and No. 10 in total blocks (396). He began his Bruin career by winning MPSF Freshman of the Year honors in 1997 and finished it as a three-time first-team All-American and All-MPSF honoree and the 2000 NCAA Championship Most Outstanding Player. Taliaferro went on to play for the U.S. National Team from 2000-03 and 2006-08 and was named to the Pac-12 Men’s Volleyball All-Century Team in 2016.

Two-time All-American Erik Sullivan was a starter on two UCLA Men’s Volleyball national championship teams in 1993, 1995 and captained the Bruins to a 31-1 record as a senior in 1995. The swing hitter earned freshman All-America honors in 1992 and was selected to the NCAA Championship All-Tournament Team in 1994. Sullivan spent eight years with the U.S. Indoor National Team and was a member of the U.S. Olympic team in 2000 and 2004, serving as co-captain in 2000. He also played beach volleyball professionally and was named the 4-Man Beach Rookie of the Year in 1996 and the Left Side Player of the Year in 1997. Following his playing career, he coached 36 All-Americans at Colorado, Nebraska and Texas and won three NCAA women’s volleyball championships as an assistant coach at Texas. He has also coached the U.S. Junior National Team and was the team leader for the 2016 men’s team that won bronze in Rio.
Pac-12 All-Century Men’s Volleyball Team (selected in 2016)
Al Scates - Coach of the Century
Karch Kiraly - Player of the Century (1979-82)
Ernie Suwara (1965-67)
Ricci Luyties (1981-84)
Doug Partie (1981-84)
Asbjorn Volstad (1984-87)
Jeff Nygaard (1992-95)
Stein Metzger (1993-96)
Paul Nihipali (1994-97)

Considered one of the greatest collegiate coaches in history, Al Scates was the architect of a men’s volleyball program that won USA Volleyball Collegiate Championships in 1965 and 1967 and helped volleyball become an NCAA Championship sport in 1970. Scates won 19 NCAA championships, 24 conference titles, produced three undefeated seasons and won more than 1,200 matches in 50 seasons at UCLA.
Eighty of his players earned All-America honors, 44 played on the U.S. National Team, 27 participated in the Olympic Games and seven were named collegiate Players of the Year at least once. In half a century, Scates compiled a coaching record of 1,239-290 (.812), one of the best percentages in NCAA history.
Scates won 19 NCAA titles in 37 years ---- 1970-71-72-74-75-76-79-81-8283-84-87-89-93-95-96-98-2000 and 2006. He was the only coach to lead a team to three successive titles three times, including four straight from 1981-84.
Scates was named Coach of the Year six times (1984-87-93-96-98-2006).
Scates was the first active coach to be inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame (2003). He was also enshrined in the SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame (2017), the CIF Los Angeles City Hall of Fame (2013), the AVCA Hall of Fame (2004), the California Beach Volleyball Hall of Fame (1998) and the first active coach to be inducted into the International Volleyball Hall of Fame (1993). In addition, he was also given the 2003 UCLA Alumni Assn. Award for Professional Achievement. In 2012, he was presented with the Southern California Sports Broadcasters Gil Stratton Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2002, Al was named USA Volleyball Men’s All-Era Coach and in 2018 was recognized as the Pac-12 Volleyball Coach of the Century. When he retired, UCLA held 27 NCAA men’s volleyball team and individual records, including consecutive victories (48), consecutive home court victories (83), consecutive NCAA Tournament victories (15) and most undefeated seasons (3). No other program claims an undefeated season. Finally, he guided the Bruins to a record of 25-0 in NCAA semifinals and 19-6 in NCAA Championship matches. His NCAA Tournament match record in Pauley Pavilion is 25-1. Many of Scates’ former players have become successful coaches. John Speraw (UCLA ‘95), who succeeded him in 2012, won three NCAA titles at UC Irvine in a decade as the Anteaters’ head coach and led the U.S. Men’s National Team to the bronze medal in the Rio Olympic Games. Karch Kiraly (UCLA ‘83), the all-time leader in beach doubles victories with 149, helped guide the U.S. Women’s National Team to a pair of silver medals as an assistant coach before being promoted to head coach following the 2012 London Olympics. Dave Nichols, who played for Scates in the 1970s, has won two NCAA Division II championships and won more than 300 matches in his coaching career. Michael Sealy (UCLA ‘93) guided the UCLA women’s team to an NCAA Championship in 2011. Stein Metzger (UCLA ‘96) led UCLA to its first NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship in 2018.
Scates tutored some of the greatest names in volleyball history. In addition to Kiraly, who has won two indoor gold medals and one on the beach, he coached the legendary Sinjin Smith, who ranks first all-time with 114 beach doubles victories with partner Randy Stoklos, also a former UCLA letterman. Smith won six Manhattan Beach Open titles, four FIVB World Championship crowns and was voted the AVP’s Best Defensive Player three times. Dave Saunders and Doug Partie teammed with Kiraly in the mid-1980s to help the U.S. Team capture its only Triple Crown: the 1985 World Cup title, the1986 FIVB World Championship, in addition to the 1988 Olympic championship.
Conf. National
Year Record Finish Finish*
1963 26-3 2nd Second, USVBA
1964 23-4 1st Second, USVBA
1965 24-2 1st USVBA Champions
1966 25-3 1st Second, USVBA
1967 23-3 1st USVBA Champions
1968 24-5 2nd Fourth, USVBA
1969 27-3 2nd Second, USVBA
1970 24-1 1st NCAA Champions
1971 29-1 2nd NCAA Champions
1972 27-7 2nd NCAA Champions
1973 21-8 4th Regional Runner-up
1974 30-5 3rd NCAA Champions
1975 27-8 4th NCAA Champions
1976 15-2 1st NCAA Champions
1977 19-4 2nd Regional Runner-up
1978 21-3 1st NCAA Runner-up
1979 31-0 1st NCAA Champions
1980 32-2 1st NCAA Runner-up
1981 32-3 2nd NCAA Champions
1982 29-0 1st NCAA Champions
1983 27-4 1st NCAA Champions
1984 38-0 1st NCAA Champions
1985 32-8 3rd Regional Runner-up
1986 30-9 2nd Regional Runner-up
1987 38-3 1st NCAA Champions
1988 28-10 4th First Round, Regionals
1989 29-5 1st, tie NCAA Champions
1990 23-5 1st Regional Runner-up
1991 16-9 1st Regional Runner-up
1992 17-7 2nd Regional Runner-up
1993 24-3 1st NCAA Champions
1994 27-2 1st NCAA Runner-up
1995 31-1 1st NCAA Champions
1996 26-5 1st NCAA Champions
1997 24-5 1st NCAA Runner-up
1998 28-4 1st NCAA Champions
1999 20-7 3rd First Round, Regionals
2000 29-5 1st NCAA Champions
2001 24-8 1st NCAA Runner-up
2002* 25-7 T-2nd (T-5th) First Round Regionals
2003* 15-14 9th (N/A) dnq
2004* 24-6 3rd (2nd) Regional Semifinals
2005* 26-6 2nd (T-5th) NCAA Runner-up
2006* 26-12 7th (1st) NCAA Champions
2007* 19-11 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
2008* 17-14 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
2009* 14-16 8th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
2010* 16-14 7th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
2011* 16-15 8th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
2012* 22-8 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals
Totals 1,239-290 23 Titles, 19 NCAA Titles, (.812) 1 shared 2 USVBA titles
NCAA Record: 1,051-253 (.805)
*MPSF Tournament finish listed in parentheses.
UCLA also won USVBA Collegiate Championships in 1953, ’54 and ’56.



Karch Kiraly (above and left) and Kent Steffes (far left below) won the gold medal in the inaugural beach volleyball competition in Atlanta in 1996. With his two indoor gold medals and his beach gold, Kiraly is the only male volleyball player in Olympic history to win three gold medals. He coached the U.S. Women’s team to a bronze medal at the 2016 Rio Games and then to gold at the 2020 Tokyo Games.

1964– Mike O’Hara, Ernie Suwara, Keith Erickson
1968– Larry Rundle
1984– Karch Kiraly**, Steve Salmons**, Dave Saunders**
1988– Karch Kiraly**, Ricci Luyties**, Doug Partie**, Dave Saunders**
1992– Doug Partie*, Fred Sturm (coach), Greg Giovanazzi (Asst. Coach)
1996– Carl Henkel, Karch Kiraly**
Dan Landry, Bjorn Maaseide (Norway), Jeff Nygaard, Sinjin Smith, Kent Steffes**, Fred Sturm (Coach), Rudy Suwara (Asst. Coach)
2000– Dan Landry, Jeff Nygaard
Erik Sullivan, Bjorn Maaseide (Norway), Mark Williams (Australia), Kevin Wong
2004– Bjorn Maaseide (Norway), Stein Metzger, Jeff Nygaard
Erik Sullivan, Mark Williams (Australia)
2008– John Speraw* (Assistant Coach-men)
2012– John Speraw (Assistant Coach-men) Karch Kiraly (Assistant Coach-women)
2016– John Speraw* (Head Coach-men)
Karch Kiraly* (Head Coach-women)
2020– John Speraw (Head Coach-men) Mitch Stahl, Garrett Muagututia, Erik Sullivan (asst.) Karch Kiraly** (Head Coach-women)
2024– John Speraw* (Head Coach-men)
Micah Ma’a*, Garrett Muagututia* Karch Kiraly^ (Head Coach-women)
**Won Gold medal ^Won Silver medal
*Won Bronze medal





(Photos courtesy of USA




Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom is the home of UCLA’s championship volleyball, basketball and gymnastics teams. The site of the 1984 Olympic gymnastics competition where the U.S. men’s team earned a gold medal, Pauley Pavilion has been the host site for an unprecedented 16 NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championships (1970, ’71, ’75, ’77, ’79, ’84, ’85, ’87, ’89, ’93, ’96, ’99, ‘05, ‘13 ,’18 and 2022).
Championship history lives in this pavilion. From the rafters hang 11 NCAA championship banners won by the UCLA men’s basketball teams. UCLA men’s volleyball teams have won nine of their 20 NCAA championships here, and the men’s gymnastics team captured national championships in the arena in 1984 and ’87. The Bruin women’s volleyball team earned two of its four NCAA titles on the Pauley hardwood. In the Spring of 2004, the women’s gymnastics team won its first NCAA championship in Pauley.
The Pavilion has hosted some of the largest collegiate volleyball crowds in history. In 1984, the men’s NCAA championship match between UCLA and Pepperdine drew 9,809 fans to set a collegiate record that stood for 15 years. The 1987 NCAA championship match between the Bruins and USC Trojans attracted 8,952 spectators. The 1993 NCAA final between UCLA and CSUN drew 8,482 fans and the 1996 final between the Bruins and Hawaii attracted 7,688 fans. Over 7,000 fans were on hand for the 2018 championship.
Renovation of the storied building began in the Spring of 2010 and was completed in October 2012. Highlights of the renovation and expansion included a new seating bowl, a retractable seating system on the event level that includes a new floor system of over 1,000 seats. The facility features a new center-hung HD video board and LED ribbon board. The renovation has allowed for additional points of sale for concession and an increased number of restrooms. The North side of the building includes two large locker rooms with lounges and film room. Other amenities for the student-athletes include a sports medicine room, weight room, equipment room and storage. The Pavilion Club on the mezzanine of the same structure will serve the campus for numerous special events. UCLA dedicated the floor in Pauley Pavilion as “Nell and John Wooden Court” prior to a UCLA men’s basketball game against Michigan State on Dec. 20, 2003.

J19 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UCSD) 15-12,15-9 W 2-0
J22 Cal Poly Pomona 15-10, 15-10, 12-15, 15-9 W 3-1
J26 at CSUN 15-6,15-7,15-9 W 3-0
J30 at Pepperdine 15-13,15-8,14-16,15-6 W 3-1
F2 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9, 15-4 W 2-0
F2 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-12 W 2-0
F2 San Diego St. (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9,15-13 W 2-0
F2 Pepperdine (at UCSB Invit.)
15-3,13-15,15-8 W 2-1
F6 UC SAN DIEGO 15-4, 16-14 W 2-0
F8 at LMU*
15-2,15-3,15-4 W 3-0
F15 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-12,13-15,17-15,15-6 W 3-1
F16 CAL POLY SLO* 15-3,15-6,16-14 W 3-0
F22 at USC* (mg)
15-7,15-11,15-11 W 3-0
F27 at Pepperdine* 15-3,16-14,15-10 W 3-0
F29 at Rutgers (at Rutgers Tny)
M1 USC (at Rutgers Tny)
15-5,16-14,15-10 W 3-0
15-12,13-15,11-15,9-15 L 1-3
M5 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-17,15-7,15-7,15-7 W 3-1
M8 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-6,15-7,15-1 W 3-0
M13 at California* 15-5,15-11,15-6 W 3-0
M14 at Stanford* 13-15,15-6,15-7,15-1 W 3-1
M28 at UC Santa Barbara* 13-15,15-11,15-6,15-7 W 3-1
M29 at Cal Poly SLO* 15-1,15-10,15-8 W 3-0
A4 STANFORD* 15-2,15-3,15-3 W 3-0
A9 at Long Beach St.* 15-12,9-15,15-13,15-9 W 3-1
A11 San Diego St. (UCLA Tny) 10-15,15-5,15-6,15-10 W 3-1
A12 UC Santa Barbara (UCLA Tny) 15-13,15-7,10-15,15-13 W 3-1
A16 LMU* 15-5,15-3,15-5 W 3-0
A18 at San Diego St.*
15-8,15-5,9-15,15-8 W 3-1
A23 PEPPERDINE* 15-9,15-6,15-11 W 3-0
A25 CALIFORNIA* W 3-0
A26 USC* 15-11,15-3,10-15,15-3 W 3-1
M9 Ohio State (NCAA semis at Ball St.) 15-8, 15-7, 15-7 W 3-0
M10 USC (NCAA Champ. at Ball St.) 7-15,15-6,3-15,8-15 L 1-3
1979 (31-0, 18-0 NCAA Champions; CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates)
J14 California (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-10,15-3 W 2-0
J14 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-3,15-2 W 2-0
J28 at UC Santa Barbara (UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 15-7 W 2-0
J28 San Diego St. (UCSB Invit.)
15-4,15-3 W 2-0
J28 USC (UCSB Invit.) 15-10,15-6 W 2-0
J28 San Diego St. (UCSB Invit.) 15-12,15-11 W 2-0
F3 CSUN 15-3,15-9,15-8 W 3-0
F10 California* 15-2,15-10,15-2 W 3-0
F14 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-3, 15-5, 15-6 W 3-0
F17 at Cal Poly SLO* 15-9, 15-7, 15-4 W 3-0
F21 Long Beach St.* 15-6,15-3,15-7 W 3-0
F28 Stanford* 15-5,15-3,15-6 W 3-0
M2 at Rutgers (Rutgers Tny) 15-12,15-13,13-15,15-5 W 3-1
M3 USC (Rutgers Tny) 15-8,15-9,15-11 W 3-0
M7 USC* 15-12,15-4,15-5 W 3-0
M9 San Diego St.* 15-6,15-7,15-7 W 3-0
M14 Pepperdine* 13-15,15-10,10-15,15-10,15-8 W 3-2
M16 LMU* 15-13,14-16,15-4,15-9 W 3-1
M28 Long Beach St.* 15-7,11-15,14-16,15-2,15-10 W 3-2
M30 Cal Poly SLO* 15-1,15-2,15-11 W 3-0
M31 USC* 15-6,15-11,15-11 W 3-0
A4 LMU* 15-6,15-5,15-12 W 3-0
A6 Ohio State (UCLA Tny) 15-1,15-2,19-17 W 3-0
A7 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11,15-9,15-10 W 3-0
A11 UC Santa Barbara* 15-5,15-6,13-15,15-4 W 3-1
A13 Stanford* 15-8,15-3,15-17,15-4 W 3-1
A14 California* 15-3,15-13,15-11 W 3-0
A18 Pepperdine* 15-7,16-14,16-14 W 3-0
A20 San Diego St.* 15-4,15-9,15-7 W 3-0
M4 BALL ST. (NCAA semis at UCLA) 15-3,15-1,15-4 W 3-0
M5 USC (NCAA Champ. at UCLA) 12-15,15-12,15-11,15-7 W 3-1
1978 (21-3, 12-2 SCIVA: T1st Place; Coach: Al Scates)
J7 UC Santa Barbara (non-counting All-Cal Tny at UCSD) 15-7,15-7 2-0
J21 CSUN 15-5,12-15,15-1,15-11 W 3-1
J29 USC (non-counting at UCSB Invit.) 15-7,15-12 2-0
F3 at California 15-3,15-5,15-6 W 3-0
F4 at Stanford 15-6,15-1,15-8 W 3-0
F10 STANFORD 15-6,15-2,15-3 W 3-0
F15 at Long Beach St.* 10-15,15-8,16-14,16-14 W 3-1
F18 at San Diego St.* 15-5,12-15,15-2,12-15,9-15 L 2-3
M1 UC SANTA BARBARA* 16-14,15-11,15-8 W 3-0
M3 at UC Irvine* 14-16, 15-4,15-3,15-7 W 3-1
M8 LMU* 15-2,15-11,15-11 W 3-0
M10 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11,15-4,15-7 W 3-0
M11 PEPPERDINE (UCLA Tny) 15-8,5-15,11-15,15-6,15-7 W 3-2
M15 PEPPERDINE* 15-13,15-11,5-15,15-17,15-8 W 3-2
M17 at USC* 11-15,15-6,17-15,15-10 W 3-1
M29 at LMU* 15-7,15-5,15-1 W 3-0
M31 CALIFORNIA 15-10,15-2,6-15,15-1 W 3-1
A7 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-11,12-15,15-10,15-6 W 3-1
A8 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-7,15-12,15-7 W 3-0
A12 USC* 15-12,15-9,16-14 W 3-0
A14 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-9,15-10,18-16 W 3-0
A19 UC IRVINE* 15-3,15-4,15-6 W 3-0
A22 at Pepperdine* 8-15,15-7,16-14,14-16,12-15 L 2-3
A25 Pepperdine (playoff:Santa Monica Col.) 15-13,17-19,15-11,15-13 W 3-1
M1 Rutgers (NCAA at Ohio St.) 15-11,15-8,15-8 W 3-0
M2 Pepperdine (NCAA at Ohio St.) 12-15,15-11,8-15,15-5,12-15 L 2-3
1977 (18-4, 12-2 SCIVA: 2nd Place; Coach: Al Scates)
J9 All-Cal Tny
J21 STANFORD 15-9,15-6,15-5 W 3-0
J23 at UCSB Invit.
F11 at Stanford 15-12,15-10,15-9 W 3-0
F12 at California 15-1,15-8,15-3 W 3-0
F16 UC IRVINE* 15-1,12-15,15-4,15-8 W 3-1
F18 CALIFORNIA 15-2,12-15,15-5,15-7 W 3-1
F25 at Long Beach St.* 15-13,18-16,15-7 W 3-0
M2 LMU* 15-11,15-6,15-5 W 3-0
M5 at San Diego St.* 15-5,15-9,15-3 W 3-0
M11 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-8,5-15,12-15,15-7,16-14 W 3-2
M16 at Pepperdine* 15-11,15-12,14-16,4-15,6-15 L 2-3
M18 USC* 14-16,15-12,15-7,16-14 W 3-1
M30 at LMU* 15-4,14-16,15-9,15-6 W 3-1
A1 at San Diego St. (at SDSU Tny) 15-3,15-12,16-14 W 3-0
A2 USC (at SDSU Tny) 6-15,8-15,13-15 L 0-3
A6 at USC* (mg) 12-15,15-6,13-15,4-15 L 1-3
A8 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-5,15-5,15-10 W 3-0
A13 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-2,15-6,16-14 W 3-0
A15 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-5,15-7,15-8 W 3-0
A20 at UC Irvine* 11-15,15-4,15-5,13-15,15-10 W 3-2
A22 PEPPERDINE* 9-15,9-15,15-13,15-8,15-13 W 3-2
A29 Stanford (NCAA Reg. at UCSB) 15-8,15-2,9-15,15-10 W 3-1
A30 Pepperdine (NCAA Reg. at UCSB) 11-15,16-14,11-15,14-16 L 1-3
1976 (14-2, 10-2 NCAA Champions; SCIVA:1st Place; Coach: Al Scates)
F6 Stanford 15-6,15-6,15-3 W 3-0
F18 LMU* 5-15,15-12,15-10,16-14 W 3-1
F20 UC Santa Barbara* 14-16,12-15,12-15 L 0-3
F25 Long Beach St.* 15-5,12-15,15-13,15-8 W 3-1
F28 San Diego St.* 15-9,15-8,15-8 W 3-0
M6 USC* 15-9,12-15,15-13,15-8 W 3-1
M10 LMU* 15-5,15-3,15-9 W 3-0
M12 at Pepperdine* 15-11,12-15,14-16,11-15 L 1-3
M17 Long Beach State* 15-9,15-11,15-11 W 3-0
A7 USC* 15-7,15-6,6-15,17-15 W 3-1
A9 PEPPERDINE* 15-11,11-15,15-13,14-16,15-7 W 3-2
A14 UC Santa Barbara* 15-12,8-15,15-8,15-12 W 3-1
A16 San Diego St.* 3-15, 15-3,15-4,15-9 W 3-1
A20 Pepperdine (Western Sect. playoff :Santa Monica) 13-15,15-13,15-7,16-14 W 3-1
M1 Springfield (NCAA semis at Ball St.) 15-4,15-2,15-5
M2 Pepperdine (NCAA Champ. at Ball St.)
NOTE ---- Complete Records available only thru 1976 UCLA’S AVCA POLL HISTORY (poll started in
(1123-327, .774, record from 1976 to present)
Team W-L Last Meeting First Meeting
American U.-Puerto Rico 1-0 1999 (W) 1999
Arizona 1-0 1987 (W) 1987
Ball State 17-3 2016 (W) 1979
Belmot Abbey 1-0 2025 (w) 2025
BYU 46-40 2025 (W) 1983
BYU-Hawaii 1-0 1984 (W) 1984
Cal Baptist 14-3 2017 (W) 2001
Calgary 2-0 1987 (W) 1987
California 16-0 1987 (W) 1977
Cal Poly Pomona 1-0 1980 (W) 1980
Cal Poly SLO 5-0 1984 (W) 1979
Cal State San Bernardino 2-0 1998 W) 1997
Chico State 3-0 1987 (W) 1984
Concordia (CA)-Irvine 18-1 2024 (W) 2000
Concordia (NY) 5-0 2003 (W) 2001
CSUN 74-15 2023 (W) 1978
Daemen 1-0 2020 (W) 2020
Fort Valley State 3-0 2024 (W) 2022
George Mason 14-0 2023 (W) 1985
Grand Canyon 16-3 2025 (W) 2009
Harvard 2-0 2018(W) 2017
Hawai’i 66-31 2025 (W) 1981
Humboldt State 1-0 1986 (W) 1986
King 1-0 2018 (W) 2018
LaVerne 4-0 2004 (W) 1995
Lewis 18-4 2024 (W) 1995
Limestone 1-0 2015 (W) 2015
Lindenwood 1-0 2019 (W) 2018
Long Beach State 71-45 2025 (L) 1976
Loyola-Chicago 9-0 2024 (W) 2006
LMU 50-1 2000 (W) 1976
Manitoba 3-0 1985 (W) 1983
McKendree 2-0 2019 (W) 2018
Morehouse College 2-0 2024 (W) 2022
Navy 1-0 1993 (W) 1993
New Jersey Insti. of Technology 1-0 2018 (W) 2018
Ohio State 23-5 2025 (W) 1979
Pacific 40-2 2014 (W) 1994
Penn State 37-7 2025 (W) 1982
Pepperdine 85-46 2025 (L) 1976
Princeton 8-1 2023 (W) 2015
Purdue Ft. Wayne 7-0 2023 (W) 1994
Rutgers 7-0 2005 (W) 1978
Sacred Heart 1-0 2017(W) 2017
St. Francis (PA) 2-0 2025 (W) 2016
St. Mary’s 3-0 1986 (W) 1985
San Diego State 43-3 2000 (W) 1976
San Jose State 1-0 1986 (W) 1986
Springfield 2-0 2012 (W) 1976
Stanford 84-27 2025 (W) 1976
UC Davis 7-0 1988 (W) 1982
UC Irvine 65-24 2025 (W) 1977
UC Riverside 2-0 1988 (W) 1986
UC San Diego 63-7 2025 (W) 1980
UC San Francisco 2-0 1987 (W) 1985
UC Santa Barbara 105-31 2025 (L) 1976
UC Santa Cruz 9-0 2008 (W) 1984
USC 97-40 2025 (W) 1976
Vanguard 2-0 2025 (W) 2025
Westmont 1-0 1985 (W) 1985
JOHN SPERAW’S ALL-TIME BRUIN COACHING RECORD (2013-24)
Team W-L Last Meeting
Ball State 1-0 2016 (W)
BYU 12-17 2024 (W)
Cal Baptist 8-2 2017 (W)
CSUN 13-3 2023 (W)
Concordia, Irvine 18-1 2024 (W)
Daemen 1-0 2020 (W)
Fort Valley State 3-0 2024 (W)
George Mason 4-0 2023 (W)
Grand Canyon 15-1 2024 (W)
Harvard 2-0 2018 (W)
Hawai’i 6-11 2023 (W)
King 1-0 2018 (W)
Lewis 3-1 2024 (W)
Limestone 1-0 2015 (W)
Lindenwood 1-0 2019 (W)
Long Beach State 12-14 2024 (W)
Loyola-Chicago 3-0 2024 (W)
McKendree 2-0 2019 (W)
Morehouse College 2-0 2024 (W)
New Jersey Insti. of Technology 1-0 2018 (W)
Ohio State 9-3 2024 (L)
Pacific 4-0 2014 (W)
Penn State 10-2 2024 (W)
Pepperdine 16-8 2024 (W)
Princeton 8-1 2023 (W)
Purdue Ft. Wayne 2-0 2023 (W)
Sacred Heart 1-0 2017 (W)
St. Francis 1-0 2016 (W)
Stanford 20-8 2024 (W)
UC Irvine 14-8 2024 (W)
UC San Diego 19-1 2024 (W)
UC Santa Barbara 11-9 2024 (W)
USC 20-6 2024 (W)
Totals 243-97 (.715)
(Scates coached UCLA from 1963-2012 - records listed date from 1976) Team W-L Last Meeting
American U.-Puerto Rico 1-0 1999 (W)
Arizona 1-0 1987 (W)
Ball State 16-3 2001 (W)
BYU 32-23 2012 (W)
BYU-Hawai’i 1-0 1984 (W)
Cal Baptist 6-1 2012 (W)
Calgary 1-0 1987 (W)
California 16-0 1987 (W)
Cal Poly Pomona 1-0 1980 (W)
Cal Poly SLO 5-0 1984 (W)
Cal St. San Bernardino 2-0 1998 (W)
Chico State 3-0 1987 (W)
Concordia (NY) 5-0 2003 (W)
CSUN 61-12 2012 (W)
George Mason 10-0 2005 (W)
Grand Canyon 1-0 2010 (W)
Hawai’i 59-20 2012 (W)
Humboldt State 1-0 1986 (W)
IPFW 5-0 2006 (W)
LaVerne 4-0 2004 (W)
Lewis 15-3 2012 (W)
Long Beach State 59-28 2012 (W)
Loyola-Chicago 6-0 2011 (W)
LMU 50-1 2000 (W)
Manitoba 3-0 1985 (W)
Navy 1-0 1993 (W)
Ohio State 13-1 2012 (W)
Pacific 36-2 2012 (W)
Penn State 25-5 2011 (W)
Pepperdine 67-37 2012 (W)
Rutgers-Newark 7-0 2005 (W)
Saint Mary’s 3-0 1986 (W)
San Diego State 43-3 2000 (W)
San Jose State 1-0 1986 (W)
Springfield 2-0 2012 (W)
Stanford 62-19 2012 (W)
UC Davis 7-0 1988 (W)
UC Irvine 49-16 2012 (L)
UC Riverside 2-0 1988 (W)
UC San Diego 43-6 2012 (W)
UC San Francisco 2-0 1987 (W)
UC Santa Barbara 92-22 2012 (W)
UC Santa Cruz 9-0 2008 (W)
USC 76-33 2012 (L)
Westmont 1-0 1985 (W)
Totals
906-235 (.794)
UCLA MVB MPSF PLAYOFF HISTORY
All-Time MPSF Post-Season Record: 33-23 (home: 17-6, neutral: 11-3, away: 5-14)
MPSF Tournament Championships: (8) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2006, 2023
2025 (UCLA #1 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Semis #4 Pepperdine (@Pepp.) L, 2-3
2024 (UCLA #1 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Semis #6 USC (@USC) W 3-0 Champ. #2 Grand Canyon (@USC) L, 2-3
2023 (UCLA #1 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Semis #4 Grand Canyon (@Stanford) W 3-0 Champ. #3 Stanford (@Stanford) W 3-0
2022 (UCLA #1 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Semis #5 Stanford (@UCLA) L 2-3
2021 (UCLA #2 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #7 Concordia (@BYU) W 3-1
Semis #3 Pepperdine (@BYU) L 0-3
2020 event not held (coronavirus pandemic)
2019 (UCLA #2 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #7 Concordia W 3-0 Semis #3 USC (@ Pepperdine) L 1-3
2018 (UCLA #2 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #7 Stanford W 3-0
Semis #4 Concordia (@BYU) W 3-1
Champ. @ #1 BYU L 1-3
2017 (UCLA #5 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. at #4 UC Irvine L 1-3
2016 (UCLA #2 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #7 Hawai’i W 3-1
Semis #3 Long Beach State (@ BYU) W 3-0 Champ @ #1 BYU L 1-3
2015 (UCLA #8 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #1 UC Irvine L 0-3
2014 (UCLA #5 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #4 UC Santa Barbara L 2-3
2013 (UCLA #4 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #5 Pepperdine W 3-0
Semis @ #1 BYU L 2-3
2012 (UCLA #5 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #4 UC Irvine L 1-3
2011 (UCLA #8 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #1 USC L 1-3
2010 (UCLA #7 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #2 BYU L 1-3
2009 (UCLA #8 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ #1 UC Irvine L 1-3
2008 (UCLA #4 seed)
Round Opponent Result Qtr. #5 Pepperdine L 1-3
2007 (UCLA #5 seed)
Round Opponent Result Qtr. @ #4 UC Santa Barbara L 1-3
2006 (UCLA #7 seed)
Round Opponent Result Play-In #8 UC Santa Barbara W 3-1
Qtr. @ #2 Hawai’i W 3-1
Semis #3 Pepperdine (@ UC Irvine) W 3-0
Champ #4 Long Beach State (@ UC Irvine) W 3-1
2005 (UCLA #2 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #7 CSUN L 2-3
2004 (UCLA #3 seed)
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. #6 Hawai’i W 3-0
Semis #2 Long Beach State (@ BYU) L 0-3
2003
UCLA did not advance
2002
Round Opponent Result Qtr. @ UC Santa Barbara L 2-3
2001
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. Stanford W 3-2
Semis Long Beach State (@ BYU) W 3-2
Champ Hawai’i (@ BYU) W 3-1
2000
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. BYU W 3-0
Semis LMU W 3-1
Champ @ Pepperdine W 3-1
1999
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. @ Hawai’i L 1-3
1998
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. LMU W 3-0
Semis Long Beach State W 3-0
Champ Pepperdine L 1-3
1997
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. Pacific W 3-0
Semis UC Santa Barbara W 3-0
Champ Stanford L 0-3
1996
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. Pacific W 3-0
Semis CSUN (@ Hawai’i) W 3-1
Champ UC Santa Barbara (@ Hawai’i) W 3-2
1995
Round Opponent Result
Qtr. USC W 3-0
Semis BYU W 3-0
Champ Hawai’i W 3-1
1994
Round Opponent Result
Champ @ Stanford W 3-0
1993
Round Opponent Result
Champ Stanford (@ UC Irvine) W 3-0