UCLA MEN’S VOLLEYBALL 2020 TEAM GUIDE

19-TIME NCAA CHAMPIONS TABLE OF CONTENTS/QUICK FACTS

UCLA QUICK FACTS 2020 UCLA SCHEDULE 2020 UCLA BRUINS Address ...... J.D. Morgan Center, 2020 Roster ...... 2 PO Box 24044 Dec. 29 Ryerson University (exhib. at Toronto)11:00 a.m. PT 2020 TV/Radio Roster ...... 3 Los Angeles, CA 90024-0044 Dec. 29 Trinity Western Univ. (exhib. at Toronto) 4 p.m. PT Athletic Dept. Phone ...... (310) 825-8699 THE COACHING STAFF 1:30 p.m. PT Ticket Offi ce ...... (310) UCLA-WIN Dec. 31 Alberta University (exhib. at Toronto) Chancellor ...... Dr. Gene Block Jan. 2 at Daemen College 3 p.m. PT Head Coach John Speraw...... 4 Director of Athletics ...... Daniel G. Guerrero Jan. 4 at George Mason 4 p.m. PT Assistant Coach John Hawks ...... 6 Faculty Athletic Rep...... Dr. Michael Teitell Jan. 6 at Princeton 11 a.m. PT Assistant Coach Spencer McLachlin ...... 6 Associate Ath. Director/M. Volleyball ...... Gavin Crew Jan. 17 at UC San Diego 7 p.m. PT Volunteer Asst. Coach Nate Ngo/Support Staff ...... 7 Enrollment ...... 44,947 Pac-12/Big Ten Challenge at State College, Pa. Founded ...... 1919 PLAYER BIOGRAPHIES Jan. 24 at Penn State 4:30 p.m. PT Colors ...... Blue and Gold The Players ...... 8-19 Nickname ...... Bruins Jan. 26 vs. Ohio State (at Penn State) 10:30 a.m. PT Conference (MPSF) Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation Jan. 30 Princeton (Wooden Ctr) 7 p.m. PT THE 2019 SEASON - A LOOK BACK Conference Phone ...... (530) 669-7600 Feb. 1 at Long Beach State 7:30 p.m. PT Conference Website ...... www.mpsports.org Feb. 6 at BYU* 6 p.m. PT 2019 Results ...... 20 National Affi liation ...... NCAA Division I Feb. 8 at Stanford* (P12 TV) 7 p.m. PT 2019 Individual Statistics...... 21-23 Home Courts (Capacities) ...... Pauley Pavilion (13,800) Feb. 14 at Concordia* 7 p.m. PT 2019 MPSF Final Standings and Statistics ...... 24 John Wooden Center (2,000) Home Records ...... at Pauley (462-98, .825) Feb. 16 USC* (P12 TV) 5 p.m. PT UCLA RECORDS ...... at JWC (87-17, .837) Feb. 19 UC Santa Barbara 7 p.m. PT Head Coach (Alma Mater) ...... John Speraw (UCLA ’95) Feb. 21 at Grand Canyon* 6 p.m. PT All-Time UCLA Volleyball Records ...... 25 Speraw’s Offi ce Phone ...... (310) 794-6141 Feb. 28 at CSUN 7 p.m. PT Career and Season Charts ...... 26-27 Speraw’s Record at UCLA ...... 139-70 (.665), 7 seasons Feb. 29 Long Beach State (Wooden Ctr) (P12 TV) 5 p.m. PT Rally-Scoring Career and Season Charts ...... 28-29 Speraw’s Career Record ...... 338-181 (.651), 16 seasons Mar. 3 at UC Santa Barbara 7 p.m. PT UCLA HISTORY Offi ce Phone ...... (310) 794-7298 Mar. 5 CSUN 7 p.m. PT Assistant Coach ...... John Hawks Mar. 7 UC San Diego 5 p.m. PT UCLA Lettermen/Uniform History ...... 30-33 Assistant Coach ...... Spencer McLachlin Mar. 13 at Pepperdine* 7 p.m. PT UCLA’s 19 NCAA Championships ...... 34-36 Volunteer Asst. Coach ...... Nate Ngo Mar. 25 Pepperdine* 7 p.m. PT UCLA’s NCAA Championship Results ...... 37 Operations Director ...... Kainani Otsuji NCAA Volleyball Championship Summary ...... 38 Mar. 28 Grand Canyon* 5 p.m. PT Statistician...... Rob Chai UCLA’s Championship Starters ...... 39 Staff Athletic Trainer ...... Mark Pocinich Apr. 2 Concordia* (Wooden Ctr) 7 p.m. PT Staff Equipment Manager ...... Tony Perri Apr. 4 at USC* (P12 TV) 7 p.m. PT BRUIN ALL-STARS Athletic Performance Coach...... Mike Linn Apr. 9 Stanford* (P12 TV) 7 p.m. PT Marketing Coordinator ...... Bree Marich Apr. 11 BYU* 5 p.m. PT USVBA/NCAA All-Americans ...... 40 Alumni Relations ...... Nancy Ishiki NCAA All-Tournament Team Selections ...... 41 Academic Counselor ...... Linda Lassiter Apr. 18 MPSF Quarterfi nals (site to be determined) TBD All-Conference Selections ...... 41 2019 Overall Record ...... 19-9 Apr. 23 MPSF Semifi nals (site to be determined) TBD Players of the Year ...... 42 2019 MPSF Record/Finish ...... 8-4, 2nd Apr. 25 MPSF Championship (site to be determined) TBD U.S. National Team Members ...... 42 2019 MPSF Tournament Finish ...... lost in MPSF Semifi nal May 1-5 NCAA Play-In Matches (site to be determined) TBD Academic All-Stars ...... 42 2019 NCAA Finish ...... na May 7 NCAA Semifi nals(at George Mason) TBD Saluting UCLA’s Hall of Famers ...... 43-46 Lettermen/Starters Returning ...... 10/5 May 9 NCAA Championship (at George Mason) TBD Saluting UCLA’s Olympians ...... 47-48 Lettermen/Starters Lost ...... 6/2 All times Pacifi c NCAA Post-Season Record ...... 54-9 (.857) *Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation (MPSF) Matches GENERAL INFORMATION Matches played at Pauley Pavilion, unless otherwise indicated. NCAA Titles ...... 19 P12 TV=Pac-12 Network broadcast NCAA VB Tournament Appearances ...... 27 Pauley Pavilion ...... 49 MVB Contact: ...... Steve Rourke UCLA All-Time Match Results...... 50-55 Record vs. Opponents ...... 56 Email: ...... [email protected] MPSF Playoff History ...... 57 Rourke’s Offi ce Phone ...... (310) 206-8187 Website ...... www.uclabruins.com

UCLA is celebrating its fi rst 100 years with a year- long university-wide Centennial Celebration during the 2019-20 school year. UCLA Athletics teams will wear special Centennial-themed uniforms.

CREDITS The 2020 UCLA Men’s Volleyball media guide was written and edited by Steve Rourke, Assoc. Sport Information Director. Special assis- tance and thanks to Rich Bertolucci and Nancy Ishiki. Photography by ASUCLA Campus Studio (Don Liebig). 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. 2019 Volleyball Grads: (l to r) Spencer Sachs, Dylan Missry, Jonah Kay (not pictured Micah Ma’a).

1 2020 UCLA MEN’S VOLLEYBALL RECORD BOOK • 19-TIME NCAA CHAMPIONS ROSTER

2020 UCLA Men’s Volleyball Roster No. Name Pos Ht. Wt. Yr. Hometown (High School/Last School) 1 Kyle Vom Steeg Opp 6-7 215 Fr. Laguna Niguel, Calif. (Aliso Niguel) 2 J. R. Norris IV Opp 6-5 210 R-So. Lancaster, Calif. (Quartz Hill) 3 Cole Ketrzynski OH/Opp 6-8 200 Fr. Tornoto, Ontario, Canada (York Mills Collegiate Institute) 4 Cole Pender L/OH 6-2 155 So. Newport Beach, Calif. (Newport Harbor) 5 Sam Kobrine OH 6-3 190 R-Jr. Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar) 6 Marcus Partain S 6-2 165 Fr. Los Angeles, Calif. (Palisades Charter) 7 Ian Parish MB 6-9 235 R-So. Marina del Rey, Calif. (Loyola) 8 Kevin Kobrine Opp/OH 6-5 180 R-Fr. Newport Beach, Calif. (Corona del Mar) 9 Brandon Rattray Opp 6-5 195 R-Sr. San Diego, Calif. (Rancho Bernardo/University of Hawai’i) 10 Grant Maleski MB 6-9 180 Jr. Long Grove, Ill. (Stevenson) 11 Cole Johnson OH 6-7 225 R-Fr. York, Pa. (Central York) 12 Alex Knight OH 6-6 180 Fr. Culver City, Calif. (Pacifi ca Christian) 13 Merrick McHenry OH/Opp 6-7 165 Fr. Bedford,Texas (L.D. Bell) 14 Cole Power L 5-11 145 Fr. Huntington Beach, Calif. (Edison) 15 Daniel Matheney MB 6-7 210 R-Fr. Hawthorne, Calif. (Bishop Montgomery) 16 Daenan Gyimah MB 6-8 185 Sr. Scarborough, Ontario, Canada (Sir Oliver Mowat Collegiate Institute) 17 Sam Burgi OH 6-5 180 R-Fr. Laguna Beach, Calif. (Laguna Beach) 18 Chris Orem MB 6-9 205 R-Jr. Mission Viejo, Calif. (Capistrano Valley/Orange Coast College) 19 Ian Eschenberg OH 6-5 195 So. Newbury Park, Calif. (Newbury Park) 20 Ethan Hill MB 6-7 180 Fr. San Clemente, Calif. (St. Margaret’s Episcopal) 21 Mads Kyed Jensen S/Opp 6-10 230 Fr. Copenhagen, Denmark (Falkonergaarden School) 22 Adam Parks S 6-5 190 R-So. Oak Park, Calif. (Oak Park) 23 Austin Matautia OH 6-4 180 Sr. Ewa Beach, Hawai’i (Moanalua/University of Hawai’i) 24 Matt Younggren MB 6-9 195 R-Sr. Escondido, Calif. (Mt. Carmel/UC Irvine)

Men’s Volleyball Coaching and Support Staff ALPHABETICAL PRONUNCIATION ROSTER Head Coach: John Speraw No. Name Pronunciation Assistant: John Hawks 17 Sam Burgi burgy Assistant: Spencer McLachlin 19 Ian Eschenberg E-ann ESCH-n-burg Volunteer Asst. Coach: Nate Ngo 16 Daenan Gyimah DAY-nan JIM-muh Statistician: Rob Chai 21 Mads Kyed Jensen Mats Coo Yen-sen Staff Athletic Trainer: Mark Pocinich 3 Cole Ketrzynski ket-chin-ski Athletic Performance Coach: Mike Linn 5/8 Sam / Kevin Kobrine CO-brin Marketing Coordinator: Bree Marich 23 Austin Matautia mahtah-ooh-tee-uh Alumni Relations: Nancy Ishiki 15 Daniel Matheney muh-THEE-knee 7 Ian Parish E-ann 9 Brandon Rattray RAT-tray 24 Matt Younggren YUNG-gren Coach John Speraw spur-raw

2 ROSTER

#1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 KYLE VOM STEEG J.R. NORRIS IV COLE KETRZYNSKI COLE PENDER SAM KOBRINE MARCUS PARTAIN Opp :: 6-7 :: 215 :: Fr. Opp :: 6-5 :: 210 :: R-So. OH/Opp :: 6-8 ::200 :: Fr. L/OH :: 6-2 :: 155 :: So. OH :: 6-3 :: 190 :: R-Jr. S :: 6-2 :: 165 :: Fr. Laguna Niguel, Calif. Lancaster, Calif. Toronto, Ontario, Canada Newport Beach, Calif. Newport Beach, Calif. Pacifi c Palisades, Calif. Aliso Niguel HS Quartz Hill HS York Mills Collegiate Institute Newport Harbor HS Corona del Mar HS Palisades Charter HS

#7 #8 #9 #10 #11 #12 IAN PARISH KEVIN KOBRINE BRANDON RATTRAY GRANT MALESKI COLE JOHNSON ALEX KNIGHT MB :: 6-9 :: 235 :: R-So. Opp/OH :: 6-5 :: 180 :: R-Fr. Opp :: 6-5 :: 195 :: R-Sr. MB :: 6-9 :: 180 :: Jr. OH/S :: 6-7 :: 225 :: R-Fr. OH :: 6-6 :: 180 :: Fr. Marina del Rey, Calif. Newport Beach, Calif. San Diego, Calif. Long Grove, Ill. York, Pa. Culver City, Calif. Loyola HS Corona del Mar HS Rancho Bernardo HS/Hawai’i Stevenson HS Central York HS Pacifi ca Christian HS

#13 #14 #15 #16 #17 #18 MERRICK McHENRY COLE POWER DANIEL MATHENEY DAENAN GYIMAH SAM BURGI CHRIS OREM OH/Opp :: 6-7 :: 165 :: Fr. L :: 5-11 :: 145 :: Fr. MB :: 6-7 :: 210 :: R-Fr. MB :: 6-8 :: 185 :: Sr. OH :: 6-5 :: 180 :: R-Fr. MB :: 6-9 :: 205 :: R-Jr. Bedford, Texas Huntington Beach, Calif. Hawthorne, Calif. Scarborough, Ontario, Canada Laguna Beach, Calif. Mission Viejo, Calif. L.D. Bell HS Edison HS Bishop Montgomery HS Sir Oliver Mowat Collegiate Institute Laguna Beach HS Capistrano Valley HS /Orange Coast Coll.

#19 #20 #21 #22 #23 #24 IAN ESCHENBERG ETHAN HILL MADS KYED JENSEN ADAM PARKS AUSTIN MATAUTIA MATT YOUNGGREN OH:: 6-5 :: 195 :: So. MB :: 6-7 :: 180 :: Fr. S/Opp :: 6-10 :: 230 :: Fr. S :: 6-5 :: 190 :: R-So. OH :: 6-4 :: 180 :: Sr. MB :: 6-9 :: 195 :: R-Sr. Newbury Park, Calif. San Clemente, Calif. Copenhagen, Denmark Oak Park, Calif. Ewa Beach, Hawai’i Escondido, Calif. Newbury Park HS St. Margaret’s Episcopal HS Falkonergaarden School Oak Park HS Moanalua HS/Hawai’i Mt. Carmel HS/UC Irvine

3 STAFF BIOS

John Speraw, winner of three NCAA titles as a head coach, has guided his Bruin teams into JOHN the NCAA Championship Tournament in two of the past four seasons. UCLA has risen to the top spot in the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) national rankings during the 2016 SPERAW and 2014 seasons and been ranked as high as No. 2 in the AVCA polls during play in fi ve of the last six seasons. Speraw became the only individual to win a title as a head coach, assistant coach and player Head Coach in collegiate men’s volleyball history after he led UC Irvine to its fi rst national championship in 8th Season at UCLA 2007. He has been named the AVCA Coach of the Year, the Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation (MPSF) Coach of the Year and Volleyball Magazine Coach of the Year during his career. In 2018, UCLA ‘95 he was inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Association Hall of Fame. The Bruin grad was named UCLA’s third head coach on June 5, 2012. He assumed the CAREER HIGHLIGHTS duties of his collegiate mentor, , and has been a part of eight NCAA men’s volleyball • First individual to win an NCAA MVB championship as a head coach (2007, 2009, championship teams (1993-player; 1995-player;1996-asst. coach; 1998-asst. coach; 2000-asst. 2012), assistant coach (1996, 1998, 2000) and player (1993, 1995). coach; 2007-head coach; 2009-head coach; 2012-head coach). • Named Head Coach at UCLA, his alma mater, in June of 2012. Speraw also serves as the head coach for the U.S. Men’s National Volleyball Team, a position • Led UC Irvine to three NCAA championships (‘07, ‘09, ‘12). to which he was named on Mar. 25, 2013. The U.S. team qualifi ed for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics • Named Head Coach of USA Men’s National Team in March of 2013; U.S. qualifi ed by winning its Intercontinental Qualifying Pool this past August. Bruins Micah Ma’a (2016-19), for 2016 Olympics by winning the 2015 World Cup and won Bronze at Rio Olympics. Mitch Stahl (2014-17) and Garrett Muagututia (2007-10) represented their country in that • Has coached 39 All-Americans, 16 fi rst-team selections. competition and were also part of the U.S. silver and bronze medal-winning efforts at the FIVB • 2018 Volleyballmag.com Coach of the Year; 2006 AVCA Coach of the Year; three- Volleyball Nations League and FIVB World Cup, respectively. time AVCA Coach of the Year fi nalist. The U.S. team qualifi ed for the 2016 Olympic Games after winning the 2015 FIVB World Cup • Coached the AVCA National Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year in 2006. and went on to fi nish on the podium at the Rio Games. It marked the fi rst time the U.S. Men had • Led UCI to two Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation regular season (2006, 09) titles won the World Cup since 1985 and the fi rst time it had qualifi ed for the Olympics at the World and two MPSF Tournament crowns (2007, 12). Cup competition. At Rio, the U.S. squad battled back from a two-set defi cit to win the bronze • Led UCI to a record of 199-106 (.652) in 10 seasons. medal. Speraw directed the U.S. Men’s National Team to its fi rst FIVB World Championship medal • Led U.S. National Team to bronze medal at 2018 FIVB World Championships in 24 years in the summer of 2018 when it beat Serbia, 23-25, 25-17, 32-30, 25-19 for the • Guided U.S. National Team to gold in 2014 FIVB World League bronze in Turin, Italy. • Assistant Coach for the 2012 USA Men’s National Team For 10 seasons prior to his return to Westwood, Speraw served as head coach at UC Irvine • Presented the 2011 U.S. Olympic Achievement Award and transformed the program into a national power. Under his direction, the Anteaters won three NCAA titles (2012, 2009, 2007) in his fi nal six years and advanced to the NCAA Championship • Assistant Coach for 2008 USA Men’s National Team, the Olympic gold medalists match a total of four times. UCI won two MPSF regular season titles and captured a pair of MPSF Tournament championships. He had the Anteaters ranked as high as No. 1 in the nation in fi ve Speraw’s Head Coaching Record at UCLA different seasons. This past season at UCLA, the Bruins utilized 13 different starting lineups while battling a Year Overall Conf. Record/Finish Final Ranking multitude of injuries and came up just short of a post-season bid. UCLA fi nished second in the 2003 (UCI) 20-11 12-10, T-5th 5th Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation (MPSF) standings and was ranked No. 7 in the fi nal AVCA 2004 (UCI) 14-18 14-18, 7th 8th poll. Setter Micah Ma’a became the all-time school leader in service aces while setting a single- 2005 (UCI) 9-20 7-15, 9th 12th season record with 64 aces. Ma’a and Daenan Gyimah each earned fi rst-team AVCA All-America 2006 (UCI) 27-5 20-2, 1st-MPSF Champs 2nd honors for the second straight season. Gyimah earned the Award as the nation’s top 2007 (UCI) 29-5 17-5, 3rd 1st-NCAA Champs middle attacker. Ma’a was named National Co-Server of the Year. 2008 (UCI) 16-15 11-11, 7th 8th In 2018, Speraw was named the VolleyballMag.com men’s college coach of the year after 2009 (UCI) 27-5 19-3, 1st-MPSF Champs 1st-NCAA Champs leading his Bruin team into the NCAA championship match. UCLA fi nished 26-8 on the year, 2010 (UCI) 15-15 10-12, 8th 8th recording the most wins by the program since the 2006 championship campaign. The Bruins, 2011 (UCI) 19-12 14-8, 4th 4th who fi nished second in the MPSF, avenged a loss in the league championship contest at BYU by 2012 (UCI) 26-5 17-5, T-2nd 1st-NCAA Champs sending the No. 2-seeded Cougars home in an NCAA semifi nal match. Earlier in 2018, he secured 2013 (UCLA) 21-11 16-8, 4th 4th a pair of milestone victories including his 100th win at UCLA (Penn St.) and his 300th career win 2014 (UCLA) 18-11 15-9, T-5th 9th as a head coach (Ohio State). The Bruins’ 14-1 start to the season was the best by a team since 2015 (UCLA) 13-14 9-13, 8th 12th the 2005 squad opened with wins in 15 of its fi rst 16 matches. UCLA earned the No. 2 spot in 2016 (UCLA) 25-7 17-5, T-2nd 3rd the fi nal AVCA Coaches poll. Setter Micah Ma’a and middle blocker Daenan Gyimah merited 2017 (UCLA) 17-10 10-8, 5th 6th fi rst-team All-America honors. Gyimah was named winner of the Ryan Millar Award as the nation’s 2018 (UCLA) 26-8 9-3, 2nd 2nd top middle attacker. 2019 (UCLA) 19-9 8-4, 2nd 7th The Bruins battled a series of injuries throughout the course of a streaky 2017 campaign. Totals 338-181 225-139 3 NCAA Titles Jake Arnitz and Mitch Stahl went on to earn fi rst-team All-MPSF honors. Arnitz was a second- (.651) (.618) team AVCA All-America pick for the second straight season. Gyimah was chosen to the All- MPSF Freshman team. The squad ranked in the top four in the country in hitting percentage, kills Note: 3 wins at UCI not included due to USA Team commitments. per set, set assists per set and service aces per set. However, UCLA could not fi nd consistency around a pair of seven-match win streaks during the season and fi nished fi fth in the MPSF with a 17-10 overall record. The 2016 season saw UCLA return to the NCAA Tournament for the fi rst time since it had captured the 19th national title in the program’s history in 2006. The 25 wins were the most since that same season and the Bruins, who tied for second in the league during the regular season, advanced to the championship match of the MPSF Tournament and the national semifi nals. Freshman Micah Ma’a earned fi rst-team AVCA All-America honors and Arnitz and Stahl were second-team selections. UCLA fi nished ranked third in the nation after spending four weeks at number one in the polls. The 10-0 start to the season was the best since 1998. The Bruins ranked among the nation’s Top 10 in aces/set, blocks/set, kills/set, set assists/set and hitting percentage. In 2015, Speraw guided a Bruin team which featured four freshmen starters for most of the season to an eighth-place fi nish in the MPSF. JT Hatch earned MPSF Freshman of the Year honors and second-team All-MPSF accolades. He was joined on the All-MPSF Freshman team by Arnitz. Trent Kersten posted the ninth-best hitting percentage mark in the NCAA. In 2014, Speraw’s Bruins peaked at No. 1 in the AVCA poll after winning the Outrigger Hotels Invitational and defeating then top-ranked Stanford. Multiple injuries led to several lineup adjustments over the balance of the season and the team tied for fi fth in the MPSF. Late wins

4 STAFF BIOS down the stretch over Long Beach and BYU helped rally the team for post-season. However, the Bruins dropped a hard-fought fi ve-setter at UC Santa Barbara in the opening round of the league tournament to fi nish with an 18-11 overall mark. Three players earned AVCA All-America recognition - Gonzalo Quiroga - 1st team; Spencer Rowe and Robart Page - Honorable Mention. Rowe repeated as a Capital One third-team Academic All-America selection. In 2013, Speraw won his 200th career collegiate match, defeating UCSB on Jan. 4, 2013 in his fi rst regular season match as coach at UCLA. Speraw guided the Bruins to an 21-11 overall record and a fourth-place fi nish in the rugged MPSF. Team accomplishments included a tournament championship at the Outrigger Hotels nvitational,I league sweeps over rivals USC and Pepperdine and a fi rst-round MPSF playoff victory — the Bruins’ fi rst since 2006. Individually, UCLA produced a pair of AVCA All-Americans infi rst-team selection Quiroga and second-team choices Rowe and Evan Mottram. The three players also earned All-MPSF honors. In addition, Rowe became the fi rst UCLA men’s volleyball player in 13 earsy to earn CoSIDA Academic All-America honors. In the summer of 2014, Coach Speraw guided the U.S. men’s volleyball team to an upset win over top-ranked and three-time reigning World champion Brazil in the FIVB World League gold-medal match. Brazil had won gold or silver at each of the previous three Olympics. The U.S. fi nished with an overall record of 6-4, including three wins over teams ranked among the top six in the world. Prior to his appointment as the USA’s head coach, Speraw enjoyed a wide variety of experience and success on the international level, including serving as an assistant coach with the U. S. Men’s National Team that captured the gold medal at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. In 2011, he was given the U.S. Olympic Achievement Award, an honor that recognizes the colleges and universities whose coaches and student-athletes have won Olympic medals in the past two Olympiads. Speraw also served as assistant coach to Alan Knipe for the 2012 U.S. Men’s Olympic Team, which fi nished fi fth after winning its pool. Earlier that year, he returned as the assistant coach for the FIVB World League and fi lled in ashead coach for the 2012 World League team for four oversees pool play matches. The U.S. men won the silver medal in the FIVB World League Final Round. Speraw joined the U.S. men’s staff in 2007, serving under Head Coach Hugh McCutcheon. After winning the gold medal, he worked with the U.S. men, as needed, including a stint as the head coach of a young team that fi nished fi fth at the 2011 Pan American Games. In 2004, Speraw had served as head coach of the U.S.Men’s Junior National Volleyball Team that took home the silver medal at the NORCECA Men’s Junior (U-21) Continental Volleyball Championship to qualify for the 2005 Championships. He also served as an assistant for the U.S. Boys’ Youth National Team (1998 and 2001), the World University Games Team (1997 and 1999) and the Pan American Games Team (1999 and 2007). In the collegiate ranks, Speraw directed UC Irvine to a 26-5 mark and their third NCAA Championship in 2012 before leaving to return to Westwood. In 2009, he guided UCI to a 27-5 overall record and fi nished the year ranked No. 1 in the country with the school’s second NCAA title. During the season, the Anteaterswere ranked No. 1 for eight weeks, the most of any team in the nation that season. UC Irvine also captured the MPSF regular season title that year. In 2007, the Anteaters claimed their fi rst national title, winning its initial MPSF tournament championship while ending the year with the No. 1 ranking and registering a school-record 29 victories, a win total that was the best among all NCAA Division I-II schools that season. Speraw was named 2006 AVCA National Coach of the Year, as well as, MPSF and Volleyball Magazine Coach of the Year. He was a fi nalist for National Coach of the Year three times while at UCI. In 2006, the Anteaters claimed their fi rst-ever regular season MPSF title, fi nishing with a 20-2 league record. The team won a school-record 21 consecutive matches to end the regular season and held the top ranking in the nation for eight consecutive weeks. Speraw, who compiled a 199-106 (.652) overall record at UC Irvine, mentored both the AVCA Division I-II Men’s National Player of the Year and the AVCA Division I-II Men’s Newcomer of the Year in 2006 (Jayson Jablonsky). UC Irvine players earned All-America distinction 21 times during Speraw’s tenure at UCI, including nine fi rst-teamers. While at Irvine, Speraw’s players also captured MPSF Player of the Year, MPSF Freshman of the Year, NCAA Championship MVP, NCAA All-Tournament Team, numerous national and conference Player of the Week honors as well as academic distinctions such as Academic All-American, MPSF & UCI Scholar-Athletes and Lauds & Laurels Athlete of the Year. Speraw, who had a team ranked No. 1 in fi ve different seasons at UCI, placed the Anteaters in the Top 10 of the fi nal rankings all but one year while at the helm. In 2008, he received a Pillar Award, which showcases outstanding achievement in ethical leadership at the 12th Annual Ethics in America Awards. Speraw was also named to OC METRO Business Magazine’s 18th annual list of the Hottest 25 Business People of Orange County and was tabbed No. 16 in the Daily Pilot’s 2007 Top 103 Most Infl uential People in the Newport/Costa Mesa Area. Speraw was on the Most Infl uential list his last four years at UCI, including the Sports Newsmaker of the Year in 2006. Prior to his appointment at UC Irvine, Speraw was involved with UCLA’s program for 12 years as a player and assistant coach. He lettered four seasons as a middle blocker, was a member of two NCAA championship teams (1993, 1995), and earned NCAA All-Tournament honors for the Bruins in 1995. As a senior in ’95, he started 29 matches as the Bruins rolled to a 31-1 record and swept Penn State for their 15th NCAA title. In the fi nal against the Nittany Lions, Speraw hit .625 (11-1-16) with eight blocks. Forthe tournament, he hit .586 (18-1-29). In his four-year career, Speraw hit .421 with 394 kills. He boasted a career blocking average of 1.3 bpg. After earning his undergraduate degree in Microbiology and Molecular Genetics from UCLA in 1995, Speraw served three seasons (1996-98) as a volunteer assistant coach — while also working at the UCLA Hospital — before being elevated to a full-time position in the summer of 1998. He remained in that post until taking the UC Irvine job in 2002. Overall, he was involved with fi ve NCAA title teams (1993, 95, 96, 98 and 2000) during his playing and coaching tenure at UCLA. John and his wife, Michelle, have two children, Brooklyn and Hailey.

Head Coach John Speraw receives his gold medal after leading the USA Men’s National Team to the John Speraw won two NCAA Championships as a 2015 FIVB World Cup. Bruin player in 1993 and 1995.

5 STAFF BIOS JOHN SPENCER HAWKS McLACHLIN Assistant Coach Assistant Coach 5th Season at UCLA 2nd Season at UCLA Stanford ‘11

John Hawks enters his fi fth season on the Bruins’ staff working with the offense and sharing recruiting Spencer McLachlin was hired as an assistant coach for the Bruin men’s volleyball program duties after helping lead UCLA into the NCAA title match in 2018. The past two off-seasons, Hawks has in January of 2019. A former All-Mountain Pacifi c Sports Federation (MPSF) outside hitter while served on the coaching staffs for U.S. Men’s Volleyball National teams. Prior to UCLA, John spent four earning a national championship playing for Stanford in 2010, McLachlin returned to Westwood years in Cleveland, Ohio where he acted as Director of Volleyball for SPIRE Institute. SPIRE is a boarding after serving the previous two seasons as an assistant coach for the University of California school designed to blend athletics and academics at the highest level. He also served as Head Coach at women’s volleyball team. The Academy for Volleyball where his 17 Open team won the 2015 AAU Girls’ National Championship. This past summer, he served as head coach of the U.S. Men’s Volleyball team which earned a silver This past off-season, McLachlin broadened his experience while working on the coaching staffs medal in the NORCECA Continental Championships with Bruins Mitch Stahl and Micah Ma’a on the for U.S. Men’s Volleyball squads which competed in the U21 Pan American Cup (fi fth place fi nish) squad. In the 2018 off-season, Hawks was an assistant coach for the U.S. Men’s Pan Am Cup Team, and the NORCECA Champions Cup (silver medal). which fi nished seventh, and featured three Bruins (Stahl, JT Hatch, Jake Arnitz). In 2017, McLachlin won the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) “Thirty Under 30” Collegiately, John Hawks has an extensive history in the MPSF, spending three seasons at Long Beach Award, which is presented to up-and-coming coaching talents across all levels of volleyball. State (2009-11), where he was responsible for recruiting, day-to-day operations and either offense or defense. Hawks spent the 2007 and ’08 seasons at USC as the top assistant coach after serving During the 2015 and 2016 seasons, McLachlin was as a volunteer assistant coach for Coach four years as an assistant at UC Irvine (2003-2006) under current UCLA Head Coach, John Speraw. Speraw at UCLA. In 2016, the Bruins reached the NCAA Men’s Volleyball Tournament for the fi rst During his time at LBSU, the 49ers made the tournament both years and had ten All-Mountain time in a decade. UCLA ranked among the nation’s top 10 that season in aces per set, blocks Pacifi c Sports Federation selections and four AVCA All-America picks. John also served as an athletic per set, kills per set and hitting percentage. At the time, the program’s 25 wins (in 2016) were department representative on the Academic Integrity Committee. the most since the Bruins won the NCAA Championship in 2006. In his two years at USC, Hawks was responsible for recruiting the top classes in the country and helping the Trojans to two consecutive playoff appearances, while compiling the most wins for the Prior to his initial stint at UCLA, McLachlin was an assistant coach for the men’s program at the program since 2000. Those recruiting classes went on to play in two fi nal fours during their career. University of Hawai’i in 2015. During his tenure with the Rainbow Warriors, McLachlin helped During his four seasons at UC Irvine, the Anteaters won 70 matches (more than the program’s fi rst UH qualify for the NCAA Tournament for the fi rst time in 13 seasons after fi nishing second in 11 years combined), and qualifi ed for the MPSF playoffs three times. He was on the sidelines during the MPSF standings. the 2006 campaign when UCI won the program’s fi rst conference title, led the nation in wins (27-5) and reached the national semifi nals, after spending eight weeks at No. 1. Hawks helped to recruit McLachlin fi nished his playing career at Stanford ranked among the program’s all-time leaders in classes that went on to win two National Championships under Coach Speraw. kills in the rally scoring era (1,288). As a senior, he was team captain and earned second-team In August 2011, John led the U.S. Junior National team to its best fi nish ever, fourth place, at the All-MPSF honors. McLachlin was a three-time MPSF All-Academic team selection and earned FIVB World Championships in Brazil. In May 2010, Hawks served as assistant coach at the Pan American his degree in Political Science in 2011. During 2011-12, he was a club coach for the Bay-to-Bay Cup in Canada where the team beat Argentina to capture the Gold Medal. Later that summer, he was Volleyball Club and went on to secure a Master’s degree from Stanford in Education in 2012. head coach of the U.S. Men’s Junior National Team which competed in the NORCECA zone qualifi er in Quebec. Hawks’ team won USA’s fi rst ever Gold Medal at the Junior National level and qualifi ed for McLachlin continued his playing career at the professional level as an outside hitter for Greek the 2011 FIVB World Championships. In September 2010, he also served as a scout for the Men’s pro volleyball team, Mas NIKI Aiginio from 2012-14. He also worked as a teacher at his former National team during the 2010 World Championships in Italy. During the summer of 2009, Hawks was high school, Punahou School, from 2014-15. an assistant coach with the U.S. Men’s National Team for the 2009 World League, where they fi nished in fi fth place in Belgrade, Serbia picking up wins versus Netherlands, Italy and China along the way. An accomplished player during his high school days, McLachlin was a member of the 2007 U.S. In May of 2008, Hawks headed up a small group of USA National Team players that trained at the Junior National Team which participated in the World Championships. In 2005, he saw action on Japan Institute of Sports Science (JISS), successfully helping the Japanese to qualify for the Olympic the U.S. Youth National Team which won the NORCECA championship. McLachlin was a three-time Games in Beijing. In June 2008, Hawks spent time as an assistant to Alan Knipe with the U.S. National selection as state Volleyball Player of the Year while at Punahou. Team at the Pan American Cup in Winnipeg, Canada, where the Americans defeated the hosts, won gold, and qualifi ed the team for the America’s Cup later that year. He was also an assistant for the USA Boys’ Youth National Team, which went undefeated at the NORCECA Youth Continental Championship en route to the gold medal and qualifi cation into the 2009 FIVB World Championship. Hawks served as the head coach at the 2006 USA Volleyball Boys’ Select A2 Training Camp, and was an assistant coach for the 2006 Men’s Junior A2 Team, 2007 Junior National team and the 2007 World University Games team. The Junior Team fi nished seventh at the World Championships in Morocco with wins coming against Russia, Brazil and Cuba, while the World University Games team defeated Italy for the bronze medal in Bangkok, Thailand. Hawks began his college coaching career as an assistant coach at Grossmont Junior College in San Diego, where he also played, from 1995 to 1997. He was the boys’ head coach at Santa Margarita High School from 2001 to 2002, after serving four years as an assistant. The Eagles went undefeated in 2001, winning the CIF Southern Section, before reaching the semifi nals the next year. He was named the 2001 CIF Southern Section Coach of the Year and the 2001 Orange County Register Coach of the Year. Hawks also spent fi ve seasons as an assistant at his alma mater, Edison High School (1990-94) and moved into assistant coaching duties at San Dieguito High School (1995) and Francis Parker High School (1996). Both squads won CIF San Diego Sectional Championships. He then moved to Santa Margarita High (1997-2000), assisting the boys (1997-2000) and girls (1997-1999) squads. The boys won a pair of CIF Southern Section titles (1997 & 1998) and the girls won three (1997-1999). The girl’s team also won the 1999 state championship, after fi nishing second in the state in both 1997 and 1998. On the club level, he coached Balboa Bay Volleyball Club for 12 years (1998-2011), winning nine medals at the Junior Olympics (1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2011), including Gold in 2000, 2009 and 2011, and silver in 2005. He was also a coach for Seaside Volleyball Club John Hawks (1995-1997), winning gold in 1997 and bronze in 1995. On the girl’s side, John’s team most recently won the 2015 AAU National Championship in the 17 Open Division making him one of the very few coaches to have won Gold medals in Boys and Girls volleyball. John is married to Julianne and they have two beautiful little girls named, Giavanna and Gabriella. Spencer McLachlin

6 NATE NGO SU Volunteer Assistant Coach 1st Season at UCLA Cal Poly SLO ‘10

Nate Ngo joins the Bruins men’s volleyball staff for the 2020 season as volunteer assistant coach. In 2018-19, he had served in a similar position for the Cal Poly SLO women’s volleyball team which posted a 25-3 record. Ngo also currently is the Technical Coordinator for the USA Men’s National Volleyball Team. He has worked with Coach Speraw in that role since 2015. Working with Team USA, he was part of the 2018 team that secured a bronze medal at the World Championship, the fi rst medal in a tournament in 24 years for Team USA. He was also on the staff for the 2016 Olympics, where Team USA won bronze, and in 2015, when the team captured their fi rst World Cup since 1985. In addition to his work with Team USA, Ngo has also been on the coaching staffs at the University of Denver (2017), Irvine Valley College (2015-2017) and University of Portland (2014). In 2013 and Di 2014, he served as technical coordinator for the U.S. Women’s Junior National Team and then as a Graduate Manager at the University of Nebraska (2011-2013), while earning a Master’s of Science U degree in statistics. He also worked for SVS Post in Vienna, Austria as the Technical Coordinator in 2011. Ngo has also served as the VIS (Volleyball Information System) supervisor at various international events, including the 2009 Women’s Pan Am Cup, multiple weekends of the FIVB World League in 2010 and 2011, and the NORCECA Men’s Olympic Qualifi er in 2012. Ngo attended Cal Poly from 2006-2010. In 2006, he began working with the Mustang volleyball team as the student manager, a year that saw the team win the Big West Conference and advance to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament. He then spent three years as a volunteer assistant and as a coach on the women’s club volleyball team before graduating from Cal Poly in 2010. Originally from San Francisco, Ngo attended Sacred Heart Cathedral High School where he played on the men’s volleyball team. .

KEY SUPPORT STAFF

Kainani Otsuji Rob Chai Director of Operations Statistician

Mike Linn Mark Pocinich Asst. Athletic Director - Asst. Athletic Director - Athletic Performance Sports Medicine

7 2020 UCLA MEN’S VOLLEYBALL RECORD BOOK • 19-TIME NCAA CHAMPIONS PLAYER BIOS

#1 KYLE VOM STEEG

6-7 / 215 / FRESHMAN Club OPPOSITE Played for Balboa Bay Club ... Balboa Bay 16-and-under Blue boys’ volleyball team won the 16U LAGUNA NIGUEL, CALIF. Open national title in 2017 at the USA Volleyball Boys’ Junior National Championships ... It was ALISO NIGUEL HS the third straight junior nationals title for the team, which also won the 14 Open Division in 2015 and the 15 Open Division in 2016 ... Two-time All-Tournament selection Open Division.

Personal High School Son of Kara and Scott Vom Steeg ... Has a brother, Blake ... The NBA’s Kobe Bryant and Derrick Rose are his favorite athletes ... Enjoys making music playlists and music from 70’s and 80’s. Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit ... Four-year varsity starter in high school ... Named All-South Coast League fi rst-team and All-CIF ... Also played basketball. USA Volleyball Named to the U.S. National Youth Training Team in 2018.

#2 J. R. NORRIS IV

6-5 / 210 / REDSHIRT SOPHOMORE High School OPPOSITE Played four years of volleyball and basketball at Quartz Hill HS ... Named fi rst-team all-league for LANCASTER, CALIF. three straight seasons in volleyball ... Team advanced to the CIF Finals in his sophomore season. QUARTZ HILL HS Club Played for Legacy Volleyball Club ... Attended U.S. National team training camp.

Personal 2019 Son of James and Yolanda Norris ... Has a sister, Breana, who attends USC ... Born in Lancaster, Appeared in three matches, with one start against Stanford ... Had a season-best three kills vs. Calif. ... Kawhi Leonard, Kobe Bryant and Lionel Messi are his favorite athletes ... Enjoys anime ... the Cardinal ... Also registered a kill versus Long Beach State. Named to the 2018 Spring Athletic Director’s Honor Roll ... Sociology major. 2018 Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the program.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS

KILLS: 3 VS. STANFORD, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 3.0 VS. STANFORD, 2019 2018 Did not see match action ACES: NA 2019 3 3 4 7 13 -.231 1.3 0 0 2 0.7 0 0 0 0.0 4.0 1.3 BLOCK ASSISTS: NA DIGS: 2 VS. STANFORD, 2019

8 PLAYER BIOS #3 COLE KETRZYNSKI 6-8 / 200 / FRESHMAN Club OUTSIDE HITTER/OPPOSITE Played for Mississauga Pakmen Club which captured the Canadian Youth Championship ... His TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA team won the U.S. High Performance Championship in 2017, with Ontario ... All-Star at the U.S. YORK MILLS COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE High Performance Championship in 2018 with the Canadian Youth National Team ... Two-time 18U national champs.

Canada Volleyball High School Member of the Canadian Youth National Team. Helped lead his school to three City Championships and was medalist of the Ontario Federation Personal of Secondary Schools ... 2018 and 2019 Provincial and National Indoor Champion and all-star Dad, Alexander, also excelled in the sport of volleyball, helping Canada to its best fi nish ever, ... Canada Summer Games Indoor gold medalist ... Provincial and National Beach champion in fourth place, at the 1984 Olympic Games ... His dad was also a member of the Canadian team 2017 ... Three-time Team Ontario member ... National All-Star in 2017. which advanced to the gold medal match of the 1983 World University Games ... Has two brothers -- Xander and Trent ... Lists his biggest thrill in sport as winning the 2016 18U Canada Games alongside his brother ... His favorite athletes are the NBA’s LeBron James and Russell Westbrook.

#4 COLE PENDER

6-2 / 155 / SOPHOMORE All-CIF selection ... Named 2017-18 Boys’ HS Senior All-American by the American Volleyball LIBERO / OUTSIDE HITTER Coaches Association (AVCA) ... No. 4 on the VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 list ... His team advanced to the CIF-SS Div. 1 Championship match and the Regional Div. 1 fi nal in his senior year. NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. NEWPORT HARBOR HS Club Volleyball Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club ... Earned four gold medals at the Junior Olympics ... Named all-tournament all four years ... Named MVP of the 17s Open.

2019 Personal Saw action in 24 matches ... Totaled fi ve or more digs in 10 matches ... Had a season-high of Has an older brother, Blake, and sister, Presley … Kobe Bryant is the famous athlete he most 12 digs versus Pepperdine ... Registered a 94% serve reception percentage on 494 attempts admires ... Hobbies include playing and hanging with friends ... His grandfather ... Averaged 1.3 digs per set on the season ... Named to the MPSF All-Freshman team. also attended UCLA ... Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019. High School Four-time fi rst-team Sunset League selection ... Three-time Sunset League MVP … Three-time

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS

KILLS: NA YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: NA 2019 24 86 0 0 0 .000 0.0 35 0 112 1.3 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 ACES: NA BLOCK ASSISTS: NA DIGS: 12 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019

9 PLAYER BIOS

#5 SAM KOBRINE

6-3 / 190 / REDSHIRT JUNIOR High School OUTSIDE HITTER Three-year varsity letterwinner in volleyball at Corona del Mar HS for Coach Steve Conti ... Team was the CIF runner-up in 2016 and 2015 ... State runner-up in 2016 after winning Div. 2 State NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. Regional championships in 2014 and 2015 ... Earned Volleyball Magazine High School All-America CORONA DEL MAR HS honors as a senior ... CIF third-place team in 2014 ... Also played three seasons on the basketball team ... Named Daily Pilot Player of the Year in 2016 ... Team was CIF Div 3A runner-up in 2015. Club Played for 949 Volleyball Club ... Team won gold medal at the 2014 USA Volleyball 2019 Boys’ Junior National Championships ... Named all-tournament in 2014 and 2015 ... Saw action in 19 matches with 13 starts at outside hitter ... Tallied four double-digit kill efforts Team earned the bronze medal at the championships in 2015 and the silver in 2013 ... (12 vs. Pepperdine, 11 at Grand Canyon, 11 at UCSB, 10 vs. Stanford) ... Had a season-best Member of the 2015 USA Youth National Training team. four aces in win over BYU ... Had at least fi ve digs in 10 matches and was credited with a Personal season-best nine digs at UCSB ... Had multiple blocks in fi ve matches with season-best four Has one younger brother, Kevin, who joined the Bruin men’s volleyball team for the 2019 season total blocks at Lewis. ... Chose UCLA for its great combination of athletics and academics ... Dad, David, was a member 2018 of the UCLA basketball team in 1980-81 ... Lists making a game-winning three-point shot in the Battle of Bay rivalry game in 2016 as his biggest thrill to date ... The NBA’s Steph Curry is his Saw action in 16 matches off the bench ... Had kills in matches at Pepperdine, at BYU, Concordia, favorite athlete ... Also has an aunt, uncle and grandfather who have attended UCLA ... Political UCSB, Stanford and at BYU ... Served up a couple of aces at Pepperdine ... Added a block assist Science major. vs. Stanford. 2017 Did not see match action in his fi rst year in the program.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: 12 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 13.5 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 2017 Did not see match action ACES: 4 VS. BYU, 2019 2018 16 30 6 5 18 .056 0.2 0 2 0 0.0 0 1 1 0.1 8.5 0.3 BLOCK ASSISTS: 3, LAST VS. STANFORD, 2019 2019 19 65 129 64 311 .209 1.9 20 13 80 1.2 1 21 22 0.3 153.5 2.4 DIGS: 9 AT UC SANTA BARBARA, 2019 TOTALS 35 95 135 69 329 .201 1.4 20 15 80 0.8 1 22 23 0.3 162.0 1.7

#6 MARCUS PARTAIN

6-2 / 165 / FRESHMAN Club SETTER Played for Pac6 Volleyball Club and SMBC ... His teams medaled twice at Junior Nationals in 2014 PACIFIC PALISADES, CALIF. and 2015 ... Advanced to the main draw at 2017 AVP Hermosa Beach (at age 17) with his brother, then 15, to become the youngest pair to ever to make it into the main draw of an AVP event. PALISADES HS Personal Son of Lisa and Peter Partain ... Has one brother, Miles ... Biggest sports thrill was partnering with his brother in 2017 at AVP Hermosa Beach ... Hobbies include fi shing, camping, surfi ng, spikeball and reading ... Favorite athlete is USA Volleyball’s ... His dad attended UCLA for graduate High School school ... Grandfather was recruited to UCLA for basketball ... Interested in a major in Applied Math. Named LA City Player of the Year in 2019 ... Won three CIF City Section D1 Championships ... Earned All-City D1 honors in 2016, 2017, 2019 ... Named All-Tournament for 2019 Best of the West ... Co-captain on the team for three seasons ... Named to Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 team. USA Volleyball Invited to join the U.S. Junior National Training Team in 2019 ... Also a member of the USAV A1 HP Beach National Team for four years.

10 PLAYER BIOS

#7 IAN PARISH

6-9 / 235 / REDSHIRT SOPHOMORE High School MIDDLE BLOCKER Played three years of varsity volleyball at Loyola HS ... Named fi rst-team All-League in 2017 ... Named to the VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 team ... Helped lead his team to the 2016 CIF Champion- MARINA DEL REY, CALIF. ship and a 2017 CIF runner-up fi nish ... Selected to the fi rst-team AVCA Boys’ Senior High School LOYOLA HS All-America squad ... Team won the 2017 CIF SoCal Boys Regional Div. 1 Volleyball Championship ... Also played one year of varsity football as a tight end / defensive lineman. Club Played for Manhattan Beach Surf Volleyball Club ... Team earned a Bronze Medal at the 2017 2019 Junior Olympics ... Played for SCVA High Performance in 2017. Did not see match action as he rehabbed from injury. 2018 Personal Saw action in 10 matches with two starts vs. Concordia and Grand Canyon ... Had season-highs Son of Nicole and Francis Parish ... Has one brother, Gavin ... Born in Tarzana, Calif. ... Mom at- of four kills in matches vs. both UC Irvine and Concordia ... Had an ace vs. Princeton ... Registered tended UCLA ... Lists blocking the last point for the CIF Championship as his biggest sports thrill to date ... Dick Butkus (His grandfather) and Chad Ochocinco are his favorite athletes ... Enjoys block assists in matches vs. King, Long Beach State, Pepperdine and Grand Canyon. lifting weights ... Can speak fl uent Dutch ... Interested in a career in the business world ... Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll in Spring 2019 ... Geography major.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: 4, LAST VS. CONCORDIA, 2018 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 4.0, LAST VS. CONCORDIA, 2018 2018 10 18 18 2 29 .552 1.0 2 1 7 0.4 0 4 4 0.2 21.0 1.2 ACES: 1 VS. PRINCETON, 2018 2019 Did not see match action BLOCK ASSISTS: 1, LAST VS. GRAND CANYON, 2018 DIGS: 4 VS. GRAND CANYON, 2018

#8 KEVIN KOBRINE

6-5 / 180 / REDSHIRT FRESHMAN Club Played for 949 Volleyball Club ... Named all-tournament at the USA Volleyball Junior National OPPOSITE / OUTSIDE HITTER Championships four straight years and MVP once ... 949 became the fi rst program to have NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. players win four straight national titles from the 15 Open division to the 18 Open division. CORONA DEL MAR HS Personal Son of Dave and Charlene Kobrine ... Has an older brother, Sam who is also on the UCLA volleyball team ... Dad, David, was a member of the UCLA basketball team in 1980-81 ... Colin Kaepernick is the athlete he most admires ... Hobbies include listening to and mak- ing music and going to the beach ... Also has an aunt, uncle and grandfather who have 2019 attended UCLA ... Undeclared major. Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the program. High School Lettered in volleyball and basketball at Corona del Mar HS ... Played point guard in basketball and opposite on the volleyball team for four years ... In volleyball, he was named All-CIF, all-league and league MVP ... No. 2 on the Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 list ... Orange County Volleyball Player of the Year by the Register ... Helped his team win back-to-back CIF Southern Section Division 1 championships ... Had 17 kills and 13 digs in the CIF-SS Div. Championship match ... Totaled 12 kills in the regional Div. 1 fi nal ... Twice named Div. 1A All-CIF in basketball after averaging 20 points and fi ve assists.

11 PLAYER BIOS

#9 BRANDON RATTRAY

6-5 / 195 / REDSHIRT SENIOR 2017 (Hawai’i) Appeared in fi ve matches, primarily as a serving specialist…Saw most extensive playing time in season- OPPOSITE opener versus Erskine (Jan. 5), fi nishing with fi ve kills (.667), one digs and one block. SAN DIEGO, CALIF. 2016 (Hawai’i) RANCHO BERNARDO HS / HAWAI’I Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the UH program. High School Lettered three years in varsity volleyball and water polo at Rancho Bernardo HS ... 2015 Vol- leyball Magazine Fab 50 selection ... Two-time fi rst-team All-CIF ... Credited with 437 kills his 2019 junior season which was the second-most in the nation ... Registered a school record 32 kills in Saw action in 24 matches with 19 starts ... Reached double-digit kills in 15 matches with match vs. Poway HS. a season-high of 24 at Stanford ... Hit at least .300 in 10 matches with a best of .583 vs. USC (17 kills) ... Had multiple aces in seven matches and a season-best four at Concordia ... USA Registered at least fi ve digs in nine matches with a high of nine vs. Princeton ... Tallied multiple Saw action for the 2019 USA Team at the World University Games which was played in Italy. blocks in 10 matches with a best of 5.0 total blocks vs. UCSD ... Hit the 20-point mark in three matches (26.0 at Stanford, 25.0 at UCSD, 20.0 vs. Pepperdine) ... 35th in the NCAA in hitting Club percentage (.310), 34th in points per set (3.87), 30th in kills per set (3.33) ... Eighth in the Played three years for Seaside Volleyball Club ... Member of the 18s squad which placed in the MPSF in aces per set (0.30). Top 10 in 2015. 2018 (Hawai’i) Personal Appeared in 12 matches, with one start at opposite (vs. Lincoln Memorial) ... Averaged 2.0 kills, Son of Ross and Felecia Rattray ... Has one sister, Lexi ... Born in San Diego ... Earned a spot on 0.80 digs and 0.55 blocks per set ... Hit .356 and tallied 10 aces ... Posted a career-high 14 the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll in Spring 2019 ... Sociology major. kills, eight digs in start vs. Lincoln Memorial ... Totaled a career-best four aces vs. Lees-McRae.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS KILLS: 24 AT STANFORD, 2019 POINTS: 26.0 AT STANFORD, 2019 2016 (UH) Did Not see match action ACES: 4, LAST AT CONCORDIA, 2019 2017(UH) 5 5 6 6 13 .000 1.2 0 0 1 0.2 0 1 1 0.2 6.5 1.3 BLOCK ASSISTS: 5 VS. UC SAN DIEGO, 2019 2018(UH) 12 20 40 14 73 .356 2.0 0 10 16 0.8 2 9 11 0.5 56.5 2.8 DIGS: 9 VS. PRINCETON, 2019 TOTALS (UH) 17 25 46 20 86 .302 1.8 0 10 17 0.7 2 10 12 0.5 63.0 2.5 2019 (UCLA) 24 79 263 111 491 .310 3.3 3 24 88 1.1 1 36 37 0.5 306.0 3.9 TOTALS (OVERALL) 41 104 309 131 577 .308 3.0 3 34 105 1.0 3 46 49 0.5 369.0 3.5

#10 GRANT MALESKI

6-9 / 180 / JUNIOR High School MIDDLE BLOCKER Four-year volleyball starter at Stevenson HS ... Earned All-Area, All-Conference and second-team All-State honors ... was named to Volleyball Magazine Fab 50 ... The fi rst freshman to make his LONG GROVE, ILL. varsity high school team in the 40-year history of the program ... Competed with USA Continental Training team going into his junior year. STEVENSON HS Club Played for Adversity Volleyball Club.

2019 Personal Saw action in 26 matches with 23 starts ... Had at least fi ve kills in eight matches with a best Son of Crystal and Dave Maleski ... Has two brothers, Dan (his twin, water polo at Concordia, of nine kills at UCSB ... Hit at least .300 in 15 matches with a best of .800 vs. Grand Canyon ... Irvine) and Andrew, and an older sister, Kara (volleyball at Wichita State) ... Chose UCLA because Recorded multiple aces in fi ve matches, with a high of three aces in matches vs. Concordia and he wanted a new experience at a place with prestigious academics and athletics ... Lists winning at USC ... Had at least 3.0 blocks in 12 matches, with a best of 7.0 vs. Stanford ... Fifteenth in the County Little League title as a pitcher, with his brother as catcher, as his biggest thrill in sports the MPSF in blocks per set (0.69) ... Named to the MPSF All-Academic Scholar-Athlete team. ... Lists Volleyball’s Matt Anderson as his favorite athlete ... Loves to play with his dog, Willow, go 2018 fi shing and spend time with his family ... Political Science major. Saw action in eight matches ... Made two starts vs. Long Beach State (h) and at Pepperdine ... Had season-high 13 kills vs. the Beach to go with three digs and two block assists ... Served up two big aces in the NCAA semifi nal match vs. BYU.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: 13 VS. LONG BEACH STATE, 2018 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 14.0 VS. LONG BEACH STATE, 2018 2018 8 17 15 14 42 .024 0.9 1 2 3 0.2 0 2 2 0.1 18.0 1.1 ACES: 3, LAST AT USC, 2019 2019 26 91 92 34 173 .335 1.0 7 19 28 0.3 5 58 63 0.7 145.0 1.6 BLOCK ASSISTS: 7 VS. STANFORD, 2019 TOTALS 34 108 107 48 215 .274 0.9 8 21 31 0.3 5 60 65 0.6 183.0 1.7 DIGS: 5 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019

12 PLAYER BIOS

#11 COLE JOHNSON

6-7 / 225 / REDSHIRT FRESHMAN Club OUTSIDE HITTER Played for Yorktowne Volleyball Club. YORK, PA. Personal CENTRAL YORK HS Son of Jeff and Tamie ... Dad played volleyball for Penn State, 1984-87 ... Has one brother, Jordan and a sister, Syndie ... Hobbies include playing golf, basketball and going fi shing ... Has played every sport but ice hockey at some point in his life ... Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s 2019 Honor Roll in Spring 2019. Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the program. High School Four-year volleyball letterwinner at Central York HS ... Named to VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 list ... Earned All-District, All-County, All-State and All-America honors ... Helped lead his team to the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) championship his junior year ... Member of the VolleyballMag.com’s Boys 30 Underclassmen to Watch list.

#12 ALEX KNIGHT

6-6 / 180 / FRESHMAN Club OUTSIDE HITTER Played for Pac6 Volleyball Club ... Named to the 2018 all-tournament team at Junior Nationals CULVER CITY, CALIF. where his team won the bronze medal in 17-Open. PACIFICA CHRISTIAN HS Personal Son of Jim and Sue Knight ... Has one brother, Ryan, and two sisters Ellie and Lindsey ... Both parents, his older sister and grandmother attended UCLA ... Lists his greatest athletic thrill as High School pitching and winning the U.S. Championship at the Pony World Series for baseball ... Football’s Named to the volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit list ... 2019 Volleyballmag.com National High School Tom Brady is the famous athlete he most admires ... Hobbies include beach volleyball, surfi ng Player of the Year ... First-team all-league for three seasons, league MVP and two-time All-CIF and video games. selection .... Helped lead the Sea Wolves to the Southern Section Division 5 championship match, where he posted 35 kills in a loss to El Modena ... Also lettered in basketball and baseball (pitcher, outfi eld).

USA Volleyball Member of the U.S. Youth National Team which won the silver medal at the 2018 NORCECA U19 championships in Costa Rica ... Served as team captain ... He fi nished with six points in the championship match against Cuba ... 2018 USA Volleyball Boys Youth Training Team ... USA HP Championships Select Red Team in 2017 at Ft. Lauderdale for USA Beach.

13 PLAYER BIOS

#13 MERRICK McHENRY

6-7 / 165 / FRESHMAN Club OUTSIDE HITTER / OPPOSITE Played for Austin Juniors ... Named to the Open 18 all-tournament team at Junior Nationals in BEDFORD, TEXAS 2019 ... Advanced to the gold bracket at 18 Open Junior Nationals ... Team captain ... Named L.D. BELL HS Club Newcomer of the Year. Personal Son of Jennifer and Metrick McHenry ... Mom played volleyball at Texas Tech, while dad played High School football at Texas Tech and Texas A&M-Commerce ... Has an older brother, Metrick, and an older sister, Makenzie along with a twin sister, Mally ... Chose UCLA for a great education, great Volleyballmag.com Fab 50 recruit ... Considered one of the nation’s top 5 recruits in volleyball by volleyball and great tradition ... Lists USA Volleyball’s Ben Patch as the famous athlete he most Volleyball Magazine ... Volleyball and track standout at L.D. Bell HS ... Also lettered in basketball ... admires ... Hobbies include photography. All-State performer in track and as a sophomore won the state championship in the 110 hurdles, long jump and triple jump ... All-District selection in basketball. USA Volleyball Member of the U.S. Youth National Training Team in 2018.

#14 COLE POWER

5-11 / 145 / FRESHMAN Club LIBERO Played for Balboa Bay Volleyball Club ... Named all-tournament at Junior Nationals in 2016, 2017 HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF. and 2019 ... Earned Junior Nationals championships in 2015, 2016 and 2017 (silver in 2019) ... Team earned silver medal at Junior Nationals in 2019. EDISON HS Personal Son of Tom and Jaryl ... Dad attended UCLA ... Has one older brother, Tyler ... Hobbies include High School beach volleyball and hanging out with friends ... Lists Kobe Bryant, Aaron Rodgers and Steph Four-year starter ... Named to VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 list ... Earned fi rst-teamDaily Pilot Dream Curry as his favorite athletes ... His uncle, John Power, played volleyball at Long Beach State. Team and three-time fi rst-team Sunset League honors ... Team captain for three seasons ... Team MVP in 2019 ... Had career-high 28 digs in a match ... 2017 Team Defensive Player of the Year ... Golden Key Award recipient ... 2019 Athletic Hall of Fame inductee. USA Volleyball Member of the U.S Youth National Training Team in 2018 and 2019 .... USA High Performance 2015-19.

14 PLAYER BIOS

#15 DANIEL MATHENEY

6-7 / 210 / REDSHIRT FRESHMAN Del Rey League MVP, fi rst-team All-CIF-SS Division 2, and fi rst-team Daily Breeze All-Area ... Also played on the basketball team at Bishop Montgomery and was a member of the CIF Open State MIDDLE BLOCKER championship team his junior year. HAWTHORNE, CALIF. USA Volleyball BISHOP MONTGOMERY HS Selected to the U.S. Junior National team which fi nished fi fth in the Pan Am Cup in Peru in May, 2019 ... Participated on the 2017 U.S. Boys Youth National Team training squad. Club Played for Team Rockstar Volleyball Club ... Took second place at the SCVA High Performance 2019 Championship ... Team fi nished third at the 2016 Junior National Championships. Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the program. Personal High School Son of Maria and Tony Matheney ... Lifelong Bruin family ... Sister, Sophia, attends Long Beach Played volleyball at Bishop Montgomery HS in Torrance, Calif. ... No. 5 on the VolleyballMag.com State ... Interested in a Business Economics major. Fab 50 list ... Named First-Team Boys’ HS Senior All-American by the American Volleyball Coaches Association ... Helped lead his high school team to back-to-back Del Rey League titles in 2017 and 2018 and a CIF Finals appearance in 2017 ... After his senior season, Matheney was named

#16 DAENAN GYIMAH

6-8 / 185 / SENIOR 2017 Saw action in 19 matches with 17 starts ... Led the team in hitting % with a .494 mark ... MIDDLE BLOCKER Was named Off the Block National Freshman of the Week for his play in wins versus UC SCARBOROUGH, ONTARIO, CANADA Irvine (14 kills, .737) and UCSD (.500 and 4 blocks) ... Hit .800 vs. Long Beach State on 15 swings, good for 13 kills ... Had multiple blocks in 14 of the 19 matches ... Had seven SIR OLIVER MOWAT COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE double-digit kill matches and led the team in block assists in seven matches ... His 0.98 blocks per set mark was second on the team ... Named to the All-MPSF Freshman team and honorable mention All-MPSF squad. 2019 High School Starter in all 28 matches ... Played middle blocker, outside hitter and opposite ... Recorded 16 Volleyball and basketball letter winner at Sir Oliver Mowat Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, double-digit kill matches on the season with a high of 25 kills vs. Stanford ... Hit at least .400 Canada … Played for coaches Melvin Lowe in volleyball and Walker Chu in basketball ... in 17 matches and had a streak of 13 straight such matches during the year ... Set a school Named his team’s Most Valuable Player in each sport. single-match record with a .917 hitting percentage mark (11k, 0e, 12 tot. att.) at McKendree ... Had multiple aces in six matches with a season-best four against Princeton ... Had at least 4.0 blocks in 10 matches with a best of 8.0 vs. UC San Diego ... Hit the 20-point mark in four Canada Volleyball matches (27.5 vs. Stanford, 21.0 at USC, 20.0 vs. Concordia, 20.0 at Loyola) ... Fourth in the Named to Canada’s 2019 Volleyball Nation’s League training roster ... Member of the Ca- nation in hitting percentage (.435) ... Tenth in the MPSF in blocks (0.78) ... Named fi rst-team nadian National Indoor Senior B team ... Selected as a member of the U21 National Team All-MPSF ... Selected to the fi rst-team AVCA All-America squad ... AVCA National Player of the which competed in the World Championships in the Czech Republic in summer 2017 ... Week (Feb. 26) ... MPSF Player of the Week (Feb. 4) and (Feb. 25) ... Off the Block National Hitter of Competed in the 2016 NORCECA Jr. National U21 championships (Canada earned silver the Week (Apr. 1) ... Winner of Off the Block’s Ryan Millar Award as the nation’s top middle attacker medal)... Member of the Junior Canadian National Volleyball team and the Youth Canadian and the Dain Blanton Diversity Award ... Named to the second-team Off the Block All-Decade team. National team prior to coming to UCLA. 2018 Club Starter in all 34 matches ... First-team AVCA and VolleyMob All-America ... First-team All-MPSF Played for the STVC Nemesis Volleyball … Named a Canadian All-Star ... Team placed third ... Ryan Millar Award winner as the nation’s top middle attacker ... Named to NCAA All-Tourna- in the Province and 5th in the Country. ment team ... Led the nation in hitting percentage (.528) ... First Bruin to hit over .500 in the rally scoring era (since 2001) ... Three-time MPSF Player of the Week (two on defense, one on Personal offense) ... His 151 total blocks rank second on the all-time school list (rally scoring era since Chose UCLA because it is the perfect mix of academics and athletics ... Son of Alexander 2001) ... Third in the NCAA in blocks/set (1.22) ... His .889 mark vs. Pepperdine (17-1-18) and Deborah Gyimah ... Has one older sister, Aja ... Lists his biggest athletic thrill to date as was the best hitting percentage by any player in the country with 15-19 attempts in a match playing volleyball with his country’s fl ag across his chest ... Canadian National team member ... Double-digit kills in 13 matches ... Had season-high 21 kills against Long Beach in NCAA Justin Duff is his favorite athlete ... Hobbies include producing hip hop music ... Has pro- Championship match ... Hit at least .500 in 22 matches ... Had at least fi ve blocks assists in 16 duced for some of Toronto’s biggest non-mainstream musicians ... Political Science major. matches.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS

KILLS: 25 VS. STANFORD, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 27.5 VS. STANFORD, 2019 2017 19 59 142 26 235 .494 2.4 4 9 16 0.3 6 52 58 0.9 183.0 3.1 ACES: 4 VS. PRINCETON, 2019 2018 34 124 301 43 489 .528 2.4 12 46 41 0.3 14 137 151 1.2 429.5 3.5 BLOCK ASSISTS: 5, LAST AT BYU, 2019 2019 28 104 311 72 550 .435 2.9 10 25 51 0.5 11 70 81 0.8 382.0 3.7 DIGS: 7, LAST AT USC, 2019 TOTALS 81 287 754 141 1274 .481 2.6 26 80 108 0.4 31 259 290 1.1 994.5 3.5

15 PLAYER BIOS

#17 SAM BURGI

6-5 / 180 / REDSHIRT FRESHMAN USA Volleyball OUTSIDE HITTER Selected to the 2017 USA Boys’ Youth National Training Team. LAGUNA BEACH, CALIF. Club LAGUNA BEACH HS Played club for 949 ... Earned a gold medal when playing 15s, 16s, 17s and 18s at the Junior National Championships. Personal 2019 Son of Richard Burgi and Lori Kahn ... Has one brother, Jack ... Hobbies include playing the piano, Did not see match action during his fi rst season in the program. going to the beach, playing video games and travel ... Undeclared major. High School VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 List ... Three-year all-league performer ... Team Offensive Player of the Year as a senior ... Named to the VolleyballMag.com “Boys’ 30 Underclassmen to Watch” list.

#18 CHRIS OREM

6-9 / 205 / REDSHIRT JUNIOR Community College Athletic Association Championship and posted a 21-1 overall season MIDDLE BLOCKER record ... Averaged 1.39 kills per set and 1.27 blocks per set ... Had season-highs of 5 blocks MISSION VIEJO, CALIF. and 12 kills. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE / CAPISTRANO VALLEY HS High School Played two years of varsity volleyball at Capistrano Valley HS. Club 2019 Played for 949 Volleyball Club ... Team earned a Gold Medal at 2015 Junior Olympics. Saw action against USC in the MPSF semifi nal playoff match. Personal 2018 Son of Marv and Linda Orem ... Has two older brothers - Alex and Ben (on rowing team at Cal) Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the Bruin program. ... Born in Placerville, Calif. ... Lists winning the state junior college championship as his biggest Junior College sports thrill to date ... Mike Trout, Derek Jeter, Colin Kaepernick and Muhammad Ali are his favorite athletes ... Enjoys baseball and politics ... Named to the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for Fall 2017 Attended Orange Coast College from 2016-2017 ... His team captured the 2017 California and Spring 2019 ... Political Science major.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: NA YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: NA 2018 Did not see match action ACES: NA 2019 1 1 0 0 0 .000 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0.0 0.0 BLOCK ASSISTS: NA DIGS: NA

16 PLAYER BIOS

#19 IAN ESCHENBERG

6-5 / 195 / SOPHOMORE Club OUTSIDE HITTER Played for Ventura County Volleyball Club and Bones Volleyball Club ... Team earned a Silver Medal at 2014 18s at Junior Olympics. NEWBURY PARK, CALIF. NEWBURY PARK HS USA Volleyball Played on U19 National Beach team in 2015.

Personal 2019 Son of Amy and Michael Eschenberg ... Has three brothers - Zach (BYU volleyball), Tim and Caleb ... Born in Bethesda, Md. ... Lists playing in Virginia to secure an open bid for Junior Nationals as Saw action in four matches with starts at BYU and at Stanford ... Had a season-best 10 his biggest thrill to date ... Famous athletes he admires include Killian Mbappe, Casey Patterson, kills at BYU to go with seven digs ... Put down six kills at Stanford with two blocks and Taylor Sander ... Hobbies include working on cars, going to the beach and listening to music ... three digs ... Had two digs vs. Penn State. He is fl uent in Portuguese ... Served a church mission in Brazil following his senior year in high High School school ... Looking to major in Mathematics and Applied Sciences ... Named to the Athletic Direc- tor’s Honor Roll for Spring 2019. Played four years of varsity volleyball at Newbury Park HS at opposite and at outside hitter ... VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 list ... Earned Marmonte League MVP as a senior and fi rst-team All- Marmonte League and All-Ventura County honors. UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: 10 AT BYU, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 10.5 AT BYU, 2019 2019 4 13 17 12 46 .109 1.3 3 0 12 0.9 0 3 3 0.2 18.5 1.4 ACES: NA BLOCK ASSISTS: 2 AT STANFORD, 2019 DIGS: 7 AT BYU, 2019

#20 ETHAN HILL 6-7 / 180 / Freshman Club MIDDLE BLOCKER Played club volleyball for Balboa Bay and was named to the all-tournament team at Junior Nationals SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. on three occasions ... Junior National Champions. Personal ST. MARGARET’S EPISCOPAL HS Son of Dave and Melissa ... Has a brother, Clark, and two sisters, Luci and Ruby ... Lists his great- est thrill in sports as representing his country in volleyball competitions ... The famous athlete he admires most is Derrick Rose ... Hobbies include hanging out with friends. High School Volleyballmag.com Boys Fab 50 recruit ... Three-time fi rst-team All-CIF selection ... Three-time fi rst-team all-league performer and league MVP.

USA Volleyball Member of the U.S. Youth National Team which competed in the U19 World Volleyball Champion- ships in Tunisia in the summer of 2019 ... Played on the U.S. Youth National Team which took second place at the Youth NORCECA Championships in June of 2018.

17 PLAYER BIOS

#21 MADS KYED JENSEN

6-10 / 230 / FRESHMAN Club SETTER / OPPOSITE Played for Gentofte Volley which won the 2018 and 2019 Danish Championship COPENHAGEN, DENMARK and the 2018 and 2016 Danish Cup Championships. FALKONERGAARDEN SCHOOL Personal Son of Jacob Jensen and Mette Marie Kyed ... Has two brothers, Johan and Jeppe ... Lists his biggest sports thrill to date as winning the Danish Championship ... Famous athlete that he most Danish National and Youth National Teams admires is Kobe Bryant ... Hobbies include hanging out with friends and reading ... Used to play Named top setter in the Danish League for 2018 and 2019 ... MVP at the Danish U16 and U18 the saxophone. Championships ... Also named best setter and MVP at the North European Volleyball Zonal As- sociation (EVZA) U17 Nordic Championships. Denmark Played for the Danish Junior and Senior National team.

#22 ADAM PARKS

6-5 / 190 / REDSHIRT SOPHOMORE among the nation’s top 5 recruits on the VolleyballMag.com Fab 50 list ... Three-time fi rst-team All-CIF pick ... Helped lead his team to the 2015 and 2016 CIF Div. 2 State titles and had one CIF SETTER runner-up fi nish ... Named Ventura County Player of the Year for two years. OAK PARK, CALIF. Club OAK PARK HS Played for Spectrum and Rise Volleyball Clubs ... Named fi rst-team All-Junior Olympics ... First-team Junior Olympics selection ... MVP of Junior Olympics (Spectrum 14s, 15s, 16s, 17s; Rise 18s) ... Won the Gold medal for 16s at Junior Olympics ... Took home the silver medal at Junior Olympics 15s ... Earned a Bronze medal at Junior Olympics for 14s and 18s.

2019 Personal Saw action in 18 matches with nine starts ... The team hit over .300 in fi ve of his starts at set- Son of Arlyn and Lance Parks ... Has three brothers - Justin, Brendan and Alex (played two ter ... Had multiple kills in four matches with a best of 10 kills at Lewis ... Recorded a season- seasons of volleyball at UCLA) ... Born in Tarzana, Calif. ... Mom attended UCLA ... Lists winning high 50 set assists in match at USC ... Had double-digit digs in matches against Concordia (14) a gold medal at the Junior Olympics as his biggest sports thrill to date ... Lists Volleyball’s Micah and Grand Canyon (12) ... Had multiple blocks in four matches with a high of 4.0 total blocks at Christenson and NBA star Kevin Durant as his favorite athletes ... Enjoys basketball and hanging Lewis ... Named to the MPSF All-Freshman team ... Ranked eighth in the MPSF in set assists with friends ... Has an interest in a career in the business world ... Sociology. per set (6.53). 2018 Did not see action during the season. High School Played four years of varsity volleyball at Oak Park HS ... Four-year starter at setter ... Recognized

UCLA CAREER HIGHS CAREER STATISTICS KILLS: 10 AT LEWIS, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 12.5 AT LEWIS, 2019 2019 18 45 28 12 60 .267 0.6 294 0 61 1.4 1 13 14 0.3 35.5 0.8 ACES: NA BLOCK ASSISTS: 3, LAST VS. CONCORDIA, 2019 DIGS: 14 VS. CONCORDIA, 2019

18 PLAYER BIOS

#23 AUSTIN MATAUTIA

6-4 / 180 / SENIOR Tournament team ... Had three double-digit kill games on the season with high of 16 vs. Long Beach OUTSIDE HITTER ... Registered four aces vs. Erskine ... Had a high of three blocks assists vs. Long Beach and USC EWA BEACH, HAWAI’I ... Hit over .300 in nine matches ... Had seven kills in NCAA opening round match vs. Penn State. MOANALUA HS / HAWAI’I High School Four-year volleyball letterwinner at Moanalua HS ... Led school to three straight third-place fi nishes in the Hawai’i HS Athletic Assoc. State Tournament and a runner-up fi nish as a senior ... Four-time Honolulu Star-Advertiser’s Fab 15 all-state selection ... Selected to Volleyball Magazine’s Top 5 for its 2016 Fab 50 list and picked as an underclassman to watch in 2015 ... 2016 HHSAA/ 2019 Enterprise Hall of Honor selection. Saw action in 20 matches with 19 starts ... Registered double-digit kills in seven matches with a best of 22 in a win over Pepperdine ... Hit over .300 in eight matches ... Had a season-high USA Volleyball three aces in a win over Penn State ... Posted a 92% serve reception rate on 359 attempts Selected to represent the U.S. in the 2019 World University Games in Italy (unable to play due to ... Totaled at least four digs in eight matches with a best of 11 vs. Pepperdine ... Recorded injury) ... Won Gold medal at NORCECA Championships in 2016 ... Member of U.S. U21 Junior multiple blocks in nine matches ... Tallied double-digit points in 11 matches with a best of 24.5 National team in 2016 and 2017 ... Played for USA select and USA youth teams from 2012-2015. against Pepperdine ... Named MPSF Player of the Week (Mar. 4) after his performances against Club Pepperdine (22 kills, 11 digs) and at Grand Canyon (12 kills) ... 15th in the MPSF in hitting percentage at .295. Played club for A’o a Koa Volleyball Club (17th at Boys Junior Nationals 18 Open Division) ... Member of Hawai’i Elite Southside Volleyball Club in 2015 (15th place fi nish at Boys Junior 2018 (Hawai’i) National Championships) ... Played for Ka Ulukoa Volleyball Club in 2014 (Boys Junior National Saw action in 25 matches with 9 starts ... Hit .349 with 1.9 kills/set ... Led the team with 24 Championship 16s Club Division title [gold medal] and tournament MVP) ... 2013 Tournament MVP aces (high of fi ve vs. BYU; 4 each vs. Erskine and Lewis) and averaged 0.26 blocks/set ... for 15s Club team which won national title (gold medal) ... Also played two seasons for Ku’ikahi Tallied a career-high 19.0 points vs. Concordia, with season-best 15 kills ... Had seven double- Volleyball Club in 2011 (team won bronze) and 2012. fi gure kill matches ... Tied his career-best with three block assists in three matches. Personal 2017 (Hawai’i) Son of Martin and Shelly Matautia ... Has one sister, Gabby, who played volleyball at Temple Univ. ... Born in Honolulu ... Famous athletes he admires includes Serena Williams, Connor McGregor Appeared in 26 matches, making 12 starts at outside hitter ... Started fi rst nine matches of season and Simone Biles ... Hobbies include hiking, going to the beach, free diving and playing video ... Posted a double-double with 13 kills, 13 digs vs. Ball State ... Named to the Outrigger All- games ... Sociology major.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS (UH CAREER HIGH) CAREER STATISTICS

KILLS: 22 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS POINTS: 24.5 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 2017(UH) 26 59 122 49 270 .270 2.1 10 13 60 1.0 2 21 23 0.4 147.5 2.5

ACES: 3 VS. PENN STATE, 2019 (5 VS. BYU, 2018) 2018(UH) 25 66 126 39 249 .349 1.9 7 24 55 0.8 1 16 17 0.3 159.0 2.4 BLOCK ASSISTS: 4 VS. STANFORD, 2019 TOTALS (UH) 51 125 248 88 519 .308 1.9 17 37 115 0.9 3 37 40 0.3 306.5 2.5

DIGS: 11 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 (13 VS. BALL STATE, 2017) 2019 (UCLA) 20 68 164 62 346 .295 2.4 15 13 74 1.1 5 24 29 0.4 194.0 2.9 TOTALS (OVERALL) 71 193 412 150 865 .303 2.1 32 50 189 0.9 8 61 69 0.4 500.5 2.6

#24 MATT YOUNGGREN

6-9 / 195 / REDSHIRT SENIOR 2017 MIDDLE BLOCKER Saw action in 20 matches and hit .382 for the season. ESCONDIDO, CALIF. 2016 Did not see match action in his fi rst season in the UC Irvine program. MT. CARMEL HS / UC IRVINE High School Volleyball letterwinner at Mt. Carmel High School ... Volleyball Magazine “Fab 50” in 2015 ... First team All-Palomar League ... First team All-CIF San Diego section ... 2015 CIF runner-ups ... 2014 2019 CIF Champs ... Also played basketball. Saw action in 16 matches with 10 starts ... Hit over .300 in nine matches, including in the Club last six of the season ... Had season-best seven kills at Pepperdine ... Had four or more kills Played club for Seaside Volleyball. in seven matches ... Recorded multiple blocks in nine matches with a high of 7.0 total blocks against Stanford. Personal 2018 Son of Roy and Mari Younggren ... Has one sister, Rachel ... His greatest sports thrill to date has been winning CIF in high school and snapping Ohio State’s home court winning streak ... Hobbies Saw action in 18 matches ... Tallied a carer-best 11 kills vs. Ohio State in NCAA action ... Tied include going to the beach, playing beach volleyball and football ... Loves dogs ... The famous his career-best with two aces vs. NJIT ... Matched his personal best with fi ve block assists in a athlete he most admires is Kobe Bryant ... Earned a spot on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll for match vs. BYU ... Had a career-best six digs vs. Concordia. Spring 2019 ... Political Science major.

UCLA CAREER HIGHS (UCI HIGH) CAREER STATISTICS

KILLS: 7 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 (11 VS. OHIO STATE, 2018) YEAR MP SP K E ATT PCT KPS AST SA DG DPS BS BA TB BPS PTS PPS

POINTS: 9.0 VS. PEPPERDINE, 2019 (12.5 VS. GRAND CANYON, 2018) 2017(UCI) 20 90 99 26 191 .382 1.1 14 6 22 0.3 6 59 65 0.7 140.5 1.6 ACES: 2 VS. PRINCETON, 2019 2018(UCI) 18 61 77 24 162 .327 1.3 6 6 10 0.2 5 42 47 0.7 109.0 1.8 BLOCK ASSISTS: 6, LAST VS. BYU, 2019 TOTALS (UCI) 38 151 176 50 353 .357 1.2 20 12 32 0.2 11 101 112 0.7 249.5 1.7

DIGS: 3 AT USC, 2019 (6 VS. CONCORDIA, 2018) 2019 (UCLA) 16 46 44 12 78 .410 0.9 1 6 11 0.3 1 37 38 0.8 69.5 1.5 TOTALS (OVERALL) 54 197 220 62 431 .367 1.1 21 30 43 0.2 12 138 150 0.8 319.0 1.6

19 2019 IN REVIEW

2019 OVERALL RECORD: 19-9 (10-1 home; 7-7 away; 2-1 neutral; 8-4 conference, 2nd place MPSF)

Date Opponent Score Scores by Set MPSF Overall Att. Jan. 2 Princeton W, 3-0 25-17, 26-24, 25-18 --- 1-0 863 Jan. 5 UC San Diego (WC) W, 3-1 25-20, 25-13, 23-25, 25-19 --- 2-0 910

Jan. 9 at #12 CSUN L, 0-3 22-25, 16-25, 23-25 --- 2-1 525 Jan. 11 at McKendree W, 3-0 25-20, 29-27, 25-21 --- 3-1 487 Jan. 12 at Lindenwood W, 3-0 26-24, 25-17, 25-23 --- 4-1 245 Jan. 16 #12 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-0 25-20, 25-16, 25-21 --- 5-1 633 Jan. 19 #1 Long Beach State L, 0-3 27-29, 22-25, 17-25 --- 5-2 2,793

Jan. 25 at UC San Diego W, 3-1 20-25, 25-17, 25-15, 25-23 --- 6-2 1,648 Jan. 31 at #7 Loyola-Chicago W, 3-1 27-25, 23-25, 25-21, 25-23 --- 7-2 1,527 Feb. 2 at #10 Lewis W, 3-1 18-25, 25-20, 25-19, 25-20 --- 8-2 979 Feb. 7 #9 Stanford* W, 3-2 21-25, 25-14, 16-25, 26-24, 15-10 1-0 9-2 805 Feb. 9 #7 BYU* (WC) W, 3-1 16-25, 25-14, 25-19, 25-18 2-0 10-2 1,615

Feb. 13 at #6 UC Santa Barbara L, 2-3 18-25, 25-21, 20-25, 25-19, 12-15 --- 10-3 487 Feb. 16 at #1 Long Beach State L, 0-3 20-25, 17-25, 19-25 --- 10-4 3,054 Feb. 20 at Concordia* W, 3-0 25-17, 26-24, 25-17 3-0 11-4 154 Feb. 24 #14 USC* W, 3-0 25-21, 25-21, 25-22 4-0 12-4 3,006 Feb. 27 #4 Pepperdine* W, 3-2 29-31, 17-25, 25-20, 25-18, 15-9 5-0 13-4 618

Mar. 1 at Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 25-20, 21-25, 25-23, 25-23 6-0 14-4 1,889 Mar. 8 Ohio State (at USC)^ W, 3-0 25-21, 25-20, 25-21 --- 15-4 300 Mar. 9 Penn State (at USC)^ W, 3-0 25-12, 25-19, 25-21 --- 16-4 300 Mar. 14 at #9 BYU* L, 2-3 32-30, 25-21, 20-25, 16-25, 15-17 6-1 16-5 2,746 Mar. 16 at #8 Stanford* L, 2-3 25-23, 21-25, 19-25, 25-23, 10-15 6-2 16-6 1,338 Mar. 27 at #4 Pepperdine* L, 1-3 21-25, 31-29, 16-25, 17-25 6-3 16-7 1,042 Mar. 31 Grand Canyon* (WC) W, 3-1 25-18, 19-25, 25-23, 25-22 7-3 17-7 790 Apr. 4 #14 Concordia W, 3-0 25-19, 25-19, 25-19 8-3 18-7 806

Apr. 6 at #6 USC* L, 2-3 25-19, 15-25, 25-14, 20-25, 11-15 8-4 18-8 1,000

Apr. 14 #13 Concordia† (MPSF Qtrs.) W, 3-0 25-21, 25-23, 25-17 --- 19-8 602

Apr. 18 #5 USC† (MPSF Semis at Pepperdine) L, 1-3 21-25, 18-25, 27-25, 23-25 --- 19-9 1,818

Home matches in bold played at Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom, unless otherwise indicated.

*MPSF matches

^—Pac-12/Big Ten Challenge hosted by USC

WC = Wooden Center

†—MPSF playoffs.

20 2019 IN REVIEW

OVERALL STATISTICS: 19-9 (10-1 home/ Pauley 7-1, Wooden 3-0; 7-7 away; 2-1 neutral)

No. Player mp-sp k k/s e ta pct a a/s sa se sa/s re dig d/s bs ba tot bk/s be bhe pts pts/s 9 Brandon Rattray 24-79 263 3.33 111 491 .310 3 0.04 24 73 0.30 4 88 1.11 1 36 37 0.47 3 0 306.0 3.87 16 Daenan Gyimah 28-104 311 2.99 72 555 .435 10 0.10 25 116 0.24 1 51 0.49 11 70 81 0.78 17 0 382.0 3.67 12 Dylan Missry 17-59 148 2.51 35 332 .340 18 0.31 15 59 0.25 22 73 1.24 0 12 12 0.20 1 1 169.0 2.86 23 Austin Matautia 20-68 164 2.41 62 346 .295 15 0.22 13 62 0.19 30 74 1.09 5 24 29 0.43 2 0 194.0 2.85 5 Sam Kobrine 19-65 129 1.98 64 311 .209 20 0.31 13 48 0.20 13 80 1.23 1 21 22 0.34 1 0 153.5 2.36 13 Micah Ma’a 28-105 147 1.40 45 335 .304 851 8.10 67 101 0.64 9 203 1.93 8 47 55 0.52 7 2 245.5 2.34 2 J.R. Norris 3-3 4 1.33 7 13 -.231 0 0.00 0 1 0.00 0 2 0.67 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 4.0 1.33 19 Ian Eschenberg 4-13 17 1.31 12 46 .109 3 0.23 0 15 0.00 6 12 0.92 0 3 3 0.23 1 0 18.5 1.42 10 Grant Maleski 26-91 92 1.01 34 173 .335 7 0.08 19 88 0.21 3 28 0.31 5 58 63 0.69 10 0 145.0 1.59 24 Matt Younggren 16-46 44 0.96 12 78 .410 1 0.02 6 25 0.13 0 11 0.24 1 37 38 0.83 7 0 69.5 1.51 22 Adam Parks 18-45 28 0.62 12 60 .267 294 6.53 0 13 0.00 1 61 1.36 1 13 14 0.31 1 2 35.5 0.79 6 Johan Kay 2-3 1 0.33 0 1 1.000 1 0.33 0 0 0.00 0 2 0.67 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 1.0 0.33 1 Garland Peed 9-25 1 0.04 0 1 1.000 17 0.68 0 0 0.00 7 28 1.12 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 1.0 0.04 21 Spencer Sachs 2-3 0 0.00 0 0 .000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 1 0.33 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0.00 3 Alex Parks 1-1 0 0.00 0 0 .000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0.00 14 Sam Jones 11-25 0 0.00 0 0 .000 4 0.16 0 1 0.00 1 13 0.52 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0.00 4 Cole Pender 24-86 0 0.00 0 0 .000 35 0.41 0 0 0.00 29 112 1.30 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0.00 18 Chris Orem 1-1 0 0.00 0 0 .000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0.00 Team 28-105 1349 12.85 466 2737 .323 1280 12.19 182 602 1.73 133 839 7.99 33 321 193.5 1.84 50 6 1724.5 16.42 Opponent 28-105 1041 9.91 404 2455 .259 969 9.23 131 434 1.25 180 721 6.87 42 365 224.5 2.14 39 12 1396.5 13.30

MPSF STATISTICS: 8-4 (2nd place)

No. Player mp-sp k k/s e ta pct a a/s sa se sa/s re dig d/s bs ba tot bk/s be bhe pts pts/s 9 Brandon Rattray 9-31 110 3.55 40 200 .350 2 0.06 8 25 0.26 0 33 1.1 0 16 16 0.5 0 0 126.0 4.06 16 Daenan Gyimah 12-50 164 3.28 43 310 .390 5 0.10 12 53 0.24 0 35 0.7 4 34 38 0.8 10 0 197.0 3.94 23 Austin Matautia 6-24 74 3.08 22 155 .335 3 0.12 2 20 0.08 4 32 1.3 0 14 14 0.6 1 0 83.0 3.46 2 J.R. Norris 1-1 3 3.00 5 9 -.222 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 2 2.0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 3.0 3.00 5 Sam Kobrine 8-31 66 2.13 42 173 .139 11 0.35 8 24 0.26 7 50 1.6 0 13 13 0.4 0 0 80.5 2.60 13 Micah Ma’a 12-50 91 1.82 27 220 .291 341 6.82 32 45 0.64 5 103 2.1 5 22 27 0.5 5 2 139.0 2.78 19 Ian Eschenberg 2-10 16 1.60 9 41 .171 1 0.10 0 12 0.00 3 10 1.0 0 3 3 0.3 1 0 17.5 1.75 12 Dylan Missry 5-20 32 1.60 11 83 .253 6 0.30 0 13 0.00 7 26 1.3 0 3 3 0.2 0 0 33.5 1.67 6 Jonah Kay 1-1 1 1.00 0 1 1.000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 1.0 1.00 24 Matt Younggren 8-26 23 0.88 5 43 .419 0 0.00 3 13 0.12 0 0 0.0 1 23 24 0.9 5 0 38.5 1.48 10 Grant Maleski 12-46 40 0.87 18 80 .275 6 0.13 10 47 0.22 3 14 0.3 3 31 34 0.7 5 0 68.5 1.49 22 Adam Parks 9-27 16 0.59 7 36 .250 213 7.89 0 5 0.00 1 40 1.5 0 6 6 0.2 1 2 19.0 0.70 1 Garland Peed 6-18 1 0.06 0 1 1.000 9 0.50 0 0 0.00 6 23 1.3 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 1.0 0.06 14 Sam Jones 4-11 0 0.00 0 0 .000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 1 4 0.4 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.00 21 Spencer Sachs 1-2 0 0.00 0 0 .000 0 0.00 0 0 0.00 0 1 0.5 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.00 4 Cole Pender 9-39 0 0.00 0 0 .000 16 0.41 0 0 0.00 11 49 1.3 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.00 Team 12-50 637 12.7 229 1352 .302 614 12.2 75 257 1.50 52 428 8.6 13 165 178 1.9 28 4 807.5 16.2 Opponent 12-50 521 10.4 196 1227 .265 489 9.8 50 190 1.00 73 377 7.5 23 186 209 2.3 19 4 687.0 13.7

Jonah Kay (l) and Dylan Missry Micah Ma’a (l) and Grant Maleski

21 2019 IN REVIEW

2019 UCLA MVB Individual Match Highs Date Opponent W/L Kills Hit% (min. 8k) Aces Digs Assists Block Assists

1/2 Princeton W, 3-0 Rattray-15 Rattray-.348 Gyimah-3 Rattray-9 Ma’a-30 Gyimah-2

1/5 UC San Diego W, 3-1 Missry-16 Gyimah-.615 Ma’a/Gyimah-3 Ma’a-9 Ma’a-37 Gyimah/Rattray-5

1/9 at #12 CSUN L, 0-3 Rattray-8 Rattray-.176 Ma’a/Missry-1 Missry/Matautia-3 Ma’a-24 Gyimah-4

1/11 at McKendree W, 3-0 Rattray-13 Gyimah-.917 Maleski,Missry,Gyimah,Matautia-1 Ma’a-9 Ma’a-45 Maleski-2

1/12 at Lindenwood W, 3-0 Rattray-11 Rattray-.286 Ma’a-5 Pender-9 Ma’a-32 Younggren-3

1/16 #12 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-0 Rattray-11 Gyimah-.714 Ma’a-2 Ma’a, Pender-8 Ma’a-31 Ma’a,Gyimah, Matautia, Younggren-1

1/19 #1 Long Beach State L, 0-3 Rattray-10 Rattray-.174 Ma’a-4 Ma’a-8 Ma’a-29 Gyimah, Matautia-1

1/25 at UC San Diego W, 3-1 Rattray-21 Rattray-.576 Rattray, Ma’a-3 Matautia-7 Ma’a-47 Gyimah-3

1/31 at #7 Loyola, Chicago W, 3-1 Gyimah-18 Gyimah-.739 Ma’a-3 Rattray, Ma’a-7 Ma’a-46 Maleski-4

2/2 at #10 Lewis W, 3-1 Missry-18 Maleski-.600 Missry-2 Ma’a-10 Ma’a-29 Maleski, Gyimah-4

2/7 #9 Stanford* W, 3-2 Gyimah-25 Gyimah-.553 Ma’a,Gyimah-1 Pender-9 Ma’a-57 Maleski-7

2/9 #7 BYU* W, 3-1 Matautia-13 Gyimah-.500 Ma’a-5 Ad. Parks-9 Ma’a-20 Younggren-6

2/13 at #6 UC Santa Barbara L, 2-3 S.Kobrine,Gyimah-11 Gyimah-.400 Maleski,Matautia-2 S. Kobrine-9 Ma’a-39 Maleski,Ma’a-4

2/16 at #1 Long Beach St. L, 0-3 Gyimah-9 Gyimah-.692 Rattray,Maleski, Ma’a-1 Ma’a-10 Ma’a-23 none

2/20 at Concordia* W, 3-0 Rattray-13 Gyimah-.529 Rattray-4 Ma’a-11 Ma’a-36 Gyimah-4

2/24 #14 USC* W, 3-0 Rattray-17 Gyimah-.722 Ma’a-4 S.Kobrine-7 Ma’a-40 Maleski, Ma’a, Matautia-2

2/27 #4 Pepperdine* W, 3-2 Matautia-22 Matautia-.486 S.Kobrine,Ma’a,Maleski,Gyimah, Matautia-1 Pender-12 Ma’a-60 Maleski-5

3/1 at Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 Rattray-15 Gyimah-.385 Maleski-1 Ma’a-10 Ma’a-51 Gyimah-5

3/8 Ohio State (at USC) W, 3-0 Matautia-9 Matautia-.353 Maleksi-2 Pender-5 Ma’a-27 Maleski, Gyimah-3

3/9 Penn State (at USC) W, 3-0 Gyimah-11 Gyimah-.733 Matautia-3 Pender-5 Ma’a-39 Gyimah-3

3/14 at #9 BYU* L, 2-3 Gyimah-16 Ma’a-.480 Ma’a-3 Ma’a-15 Ma’a-44 Gyimah-5

3/16 at #8 Stanford* L, 2-3 Rattray-24 Rattray-.486 Ma’a-5 Ma’a-10 Ma’a-26 Maleski-4

3/27 at #4 Pepperdine L, 1-3 Ma’a-13 Gyimah-.333 Ma’a-2 Ma’a-10 Ad. Parks-44 Gyimah-3

3/31 Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 Ma’a-17 Ma’a-.342 Ma’a-6 Ma’a, Ad. Parks-12 Ad. Parks-40 Younggren-4

4/4 #14 Concordia* W, 3-0 Gyimah-14 Gyimah-.290 Maleski,Gyimah-3 Missry-8 Ad. Parks-33 Gyimah, Younggren-4

4/6 at #6 USC* L, 2-3 Gyimah-21 Ma’a-.395 Maleski, Ma’a-3 Ma’a, Gyimah-7 Ad. Parks-50 Ma’a, Younggren-1

4/13 #13 Concordia* (MPSF) W, 3-0 Missry-14 Missry-.464 Ma’a, Missry-4 Ad. Parks-14 Ad. Parks-35 Younggren-5

4/18 #5 USC (MPSF at Pepp.) L, 1-3 Missry-14 Missry-.462 Ma’a,Rattray-3 Rattray-6 Ma’a-29 Gyimah-3

22 2019 IN REVIEW

2019 UCLA MVB Team/Oppt. Match-By-Match Highs Date Opponent W/L Kills Hit% Aces Digs Assists Total Blocks 1/2 Princeton W, 3-0 38/26 .381/.238 9/2 24/8 37/22 3.5/7.0 1/5 UC San Diego W, 3-1 43/27 .365/.066 11/8 25/26 41/27 12.5/5.0 1/9 at #12 CSUN L, 0-3 32/33 .200/.417 2/4 13/22 26/31 6.5/7.5 1/11 at McKendree W, 3-0 51/22 .475/.206 4/3 27/11 48/20 2.0/8.5 1/12 at Lindenwood W, 3-0 43/26 .358/.217 9/7 29/21 40/25 7.0/10.0 1/16 #12 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-0 46/30 .475/.183 6/4 28/21 40/29 3.0/3.0 1/19 #1 Long Beach State L, 0-3 37/32 .210/.429 8/3 20/21 34/29 2.0/11.5 1/25 at UC San Diego W, 3-1 52/36 .449/.289 9/8 28/19 50/34 4.0/4.5 1/31 at #7 Loyola-Chicago W, 3-1 60/46 .407/.243 7/9 31/24 57/43 8.5/7.0 2/2 at #10 Lewis W, 3-1 62/43 .336/.262 3/3 40/29 58/37 10.5/8.5 2/7 #9 Stanford* W, 3-2 64/53 .271/.254 2/1 44/29 61/50 13.0/17.0 2/9 #7 BYU* W, 3-1 39/31 .229/.118 13/7 29/32 36/30 10.0/10.5 2/13 at #6 UC Santa Barbara L, 2-3 49/47 .252/353 8/6 35/35 42/38 6.0/7.5 2/16 at #1 Long Beach L, 0-3 34/30 .260/.404 3/12 16/14 33/28 2.0/6.0 2/20 at Concordia* W, 3-0 44/24 .356/.101 7/4 32/26 42/24 8.0/6.0 2/24 #14 USC* W, 3-0 46/30 .420/.349 12/1 23/15 45/27 4.5/7.0 2/27 #4 Pepperdine* W, 3-2 68/47 .352/.248 5/4 50/30 67/44 10.5/13.0 3/1 at Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 57/38 .248/.170 1/1 27/28 53/35 7.0/12.0 3/8 Ohio State (at USC) W, 3-0 30/21 .297/.017 5/3 13/15 28/21 10.0/5.0 3/9 Penn State (at USC) W, 3-0 42/24 .530/.117 7/3 16/15 40/22 5.0/3.5 3/14 at #9 BYU* L, 2-3 67/56 .268/.285 3/4 55/41 66/54 9.0/9.0 3/16 at #8 Stanford* L, 2-3 53/66 .274/.430 7/3 26/34 51/64 7.5/10.0 3/27 at #4 Pepperdine* L, 1-3 54/59 .316/.485 4/7 34/34 53/54 6.0/10.0 3/31 Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 50/37 .282/.180 8/6 42/40 49/35 9.0/8.0 4/4 #14 Concordia* W, 3-0 39/27 .322/.110 6/4 30/32 38/25 8.0/5.5 4/6 at #6 USC* L, 2-3 56/53 .342/.357 7/8 36/36 52/47 3.0/8.0 4/13 #13 Concordia (MPSF Playoffs) W, 3-0 44/28 .316/.220 9/3 37/31 43/27 8.5/8.0 4/18 #5 USC (MPSF Playoffs at Pepp.) L, 1-3 49/49 .241/.350 7/3 29/32 49/47 7.0/6.0

2019 UCLA MVB Starters Date Opponent W/L Opp MB MB OH OH S L 1/2 Princeton W,3-0 Rattray Gyimah Younggren Missry Matautia Ma’a Peed 1/5 UC San Diego W, 3-1 Rattray Gyimah Maleski Missry Matautia Ma’a Peed 1/9 at #12 CSUN L, 0-3 Rattray Gyimah Younggren Missry Matautia Ma’a Peed 1/11 at McKendree W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Maleski Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 1/12 at Lindenwood W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Younggren Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 1/16 #12 UC Santa Barbara W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Younggren Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 1/19 #1 Long Beach State L, 0-3 Rattray Gyimah Maleski Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 1/25 at UC San Diego W, 3-1 Rattray Gyimah Younggren Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 1/31 at #7 Loyola-Chicago W, 3-1 Rattray Gyimah Maleski Missry Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/2 at #10 Lewis W, 3-1 Ad. Parks Gyimah Maleski Missry S. Kobrine Ma’a Matautia 2/7 #9 Stanford* W, 3-2 J.R. Norris Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/9 #7 BYU* W, 3-1 Ad. Parks Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/13 at #6 UC Santa Barbara L, 2-3 Ad. Parks Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/16 at #1 Long Beach L, 0-3 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/20 at Concordia* W, 3-0 Rattray Gyiman Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/24 #14 USC* W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 2/27 #4 Pepperdine* W, 3-2 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 3/1 at Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 3/8 Ohio State (at USC) W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 3/9 Penn State (at USC) W, 3-0 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Matautia Ma’a Pender 3/14 at #9 BYU* L, 2-3 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Eschenberg Ma’a Pender 3/16 at #8 Stanford* L, 2-3 Rattray Gyimah Maleski S. Kobrine Eschenberg Ma’a Pender 3/27 at #4 Pepperdine* L, 1-3 Rattray Gyimah Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Peed 3/31 Grand Canyon* W, 3-1 Gyimah Younggren Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Peed 4/4 #14 Concordia* W, 3-0 Gyimah Younggren Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Peed 4/6 at #6 USC* L, 2-3 Gyimah Younggren Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Pender 4/13 #13 Concordia (MPSF Playoffs) W, 3-0 Gyimah Younggren Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Pender 4/18 #5 USC (MPSF Playoff at Pepp.) L, 1-3 Gyimah Younggren Maleski Missry Ma’a Ad. Parks Pender

23 2019 IN REVIEW

FINAL 2019 MOUNTAIN PACIFIC SPORTS FEDERATION STANDINGS MPSF Overall All-MPSF, 1st Team Team W L Pct. W L Pct. David Wieczorek, Pepperdine, R-Sr., OH (Player of Yr.) Pepperdine 9 3 .750 23 7 .767 Micah Ma’a, UCLA, Sr., Setter UCLA 8 4 .667 19 9 .765 Daenan Gyimah, UCLA, Jr., Middle Blocker USC 7 5 .583 18 11 .621 Michael Wexter, Pepperdine, Sr., Middle Blocker Stanford 6 6 .500 15 11 .577 Ryan Moss, USC, Sr., Opposite BYU 6 6 .500 13 12 .520 Gabi Garcia Fernandez, BYU, Soph., Opposite Grand Canyon 3 9 .250 13 16 .448 Jack Wyett, USC, Sr., Outside Hitter Concordia 3 9 .250 14 19 .424 All-Freshman Team (Bruins only) CONFERENCE CHAMPS Cole Pender, UCLA, Fr., Libero Adam Parks, UCLA, R-Fr., Setter 2019 Pepperdine 2018 BYU 2017 Long Beach St., BYU 2016 BYU 2015 UC Irvine 2019 MPSF STATISTICAL LEADERS (Overall Stats) 2014 BYU, Pepperdine 2013 BYU HITTING PERCENTAGE (min. 2.5 attacks/s) 6. Max Chamberlain, Pepperdine 0.32 TEAM KILLS 7. Davide Gardini, BYU 0.30 1. Pepperdine 13.25 2012 UC Irvine 1. Kyler Presho, Stanford .457 2011 UC Santa Barbara 2. Stephen Moye, Stanford .440 8. Brandon Rattray, UCLA 0.30 2. UCLA 12.85 3. Daenan Gyimah, UCLA .435 9. Kaleb Denmark, Pepperdine 0.29 3. Stanford 12.83 2010 Stanford 2009 USC 4. David Wieczorek, Pepperdine .371 10. Gianluca Grasso, USC 0.27 4. USC 12.81 2008 Pepperdine 5. Max Chamberlain, Pepperdine .365 DIGS AVERAGE 5. Concordia 11.56 6. BYU 11.54 2007 UC Irvine 6. Hunter Howell, Concordia .364 1. Addison Enriques, Concordia 2.14 7. Kevin Vaz, Pepperdine .352 7. Grand Canyon 10.50 2006 UCLA 2. Kyle Dagostino, Stanford 2.08 2005 Pepperdine 8. Michael Wexter, Pepperdine .341 3. Michael Wexter, Pepperdine 2.00 TEAM ACES 9. Ryan Moss, USC .338 1. UCLA 1.73 2004 BYU 4. Cole Udall, Grand Canyon 2.00 2003 BYU 10. Alex Shmelev, Grand Canyon .324 2. Pepperdine 1.61 5. Matt Douglas, USC 1.96 2002 Pepperdine 6. Micah Ma’a, UCLA 1.93 3. Concordia 1.38 ASSISTS AVERAGE 2001† UCLA 7. Chandler Gibb, Concordia 1.85 4. USC 1.30 1. Robert Mullahey, Pepperdine 10.32 2000† UCLA 8. Paul Bischoff, Stanford 1.73 5. BYU 1.28 2. Paul Bischoff, Stanford 10.32 1999† BYU 9. Jordan Ewert, Stanford 1.68 6. Stanford 1.10 3. Chris Hall, USC 9.88 1998† Pepperdine 10. Noah Dyer, Pepperdine 1.60 7. Grand Canyon 0.96 4. Wil Stanley, BYU 9.52 1997† Stanford 5. Chandler Gibb, Concordia 8.90 TEAM HITTING % 1996† UCLA 6. Micah Ma’a, UCLA 8.10 1. Pepperdine .339 1995† UCLA 7. Onur Cukur, Grand Canyon 7.03 2. UCLA .323 8. Adam Parks, UCLA 6.53 TOP 20 NCAA DI-II RANKINGS for 2019 1994* UCLA, Stanford 3. USC .320 UCLA TEAM 1993* UCLA, Stanford 9. Tanner Petchul, Grand Canyon 6.45 4. Stanford .318 5. Hitting Percentage .323 1992* Pepperdine, 10. Cyrus Fa’a’ogo, BYU 4.48 5. BYU .300 5. Aces per set 1.73 Long Beach St. 6. Concordia .257 BLOCKS AVERAGE 6. Kills per set 12.85 1991* UCLA, USC 7. Grand Canyon .211 1. Kevin Vaz, Pepperdine 1.04 7. Set assists per set 12.18 1990* UCLA, Long Beach St. 2. Alex Shmelev, Grand Canyon 1.02 TEAM ASSISTS 1989# UCLA, Stanford 3. Felipe de Brito Ferreira, BYU 1.01 1. Pepperdine 12.45 UCLA INDIVIDUALS 1988 USC 4. Miki Jauhiainen, BYU 1.00 2. Stanford 12.22 Service Aces 1987 UCLA 5. Hunter Howell, Concordia 0.94 3. UCLA 12.18 2. Micah Ma’a 0.638 1986 USC 6. Stephen Moye, Stanford 0.90 4. USC 11.91 1985 Pepperdine 7. Ian McLain, Grand Canyon 0.85 5. BYU 10.95 Hitting Percentage 1984 UCLA 8. Tyler Resnick, USC 0.84 6. Concordia 10.93 4. Daenan Gyimah .435 1983 UCLA 9. Kyler Presho, Stanford 0.82 1982 UCLA 10. Daenan Gyimah, UCLA 0.78 7. Grand Canyon 9.96 TEAM BLOCKS 1981 USC POINTS AVERAGE 1. BYU 2.46 1980 UCLA 1979 UCLA 1. Gabi Garcia Fernandez, BYU 5.03 2. Grand Canyon 2.27 FINAL TOP 15 AVCA DI-II RANKINGS 2. David Wieczorek, Pepperdine 4.55 3. Pepperdine 1.97 1978 UCLA Rank Team (voting pts.) Record 3. Ryan Moss, USC 4.20 4. Concordia 1.97 1977 USC 4. Jaylen Jasper, Stanford 4.20 5. Stanford 1.94 1. Long Beach State (240) 28-2 1976 UCLA 5. Davide Gardini, BYU 4.13 6. USC 1.91 2. Hawai’i (224) 28-3 1975 UC Santa Barbara 6. Michael Wexter, Pepperdine 4.12 7. UCLA 1.84 3. Pepperdine (208) 23-7 1974 UC Santa Barbara 7. Jack Wyett, USC 4.08 TEAM DIGS 4. Lewis (185) 26-6 1973 Long Beach State 8. Jordan Ewert, Stanford 4.00 5. USC (171) 18-11 1972 San Diego State 9. Brandon Rattray, UCLA 3.87 1. Pepperdine 9.18 6. UC Santa Barbara (162) 18-10 1971 San Diego State 10. David Kisiel, Grand Canyon 3.73 2. Stanford 8.71 7. UCLA (138) 19-9 1970 UCLA 3. Concordia 8.48 KILLS AVERAGE 8. UC Irvine (131) 18-11 1969 UC Santa Barbara 4. USC 8.21 1968 San Diego State 1. Gabi Garcia Fernandez, BYU 4.29 5. Grand Canyon 8.01 9. Loyola-Chicago (105) 21-8 2. David Wieczorek, Pepperdine 3.86 6. UCLA 7.99 10. Stanford (95) 15-11 1967 UCLA 1966 UCLA 3. Jaylen Jasper, Stanford 3.70 7. BYU 7.89 11. BYU (75) 13-12 1965 UCLA 4. Jordan Ewert, Stanford 3.65 12. CSUN (59) 13-14 TEAM OPPT. HITTING % 1964 UCLA 5. Ryan Moss, USC 3.63 Princeton (59) 18-13 6. Jack Wyett, USC 3.62 1. Grand Canyon .250 14. Concordia (23) 14-19 UCLA’s MPSF Playoff Record: 29-19 (since 1993) 7. Davide Gardini, BYU 3.47 2. UCLA .259 *Division champions. #Shared title. 15. Purdue Fort Wayne (15) 17-12 8. Michael Wexter, Pepperdine 3.46 3. Pepperdine .273 † MPSF Champion under divisional playoff 9. Brandon Rattray, UCLA 3.33 4. USC .278 Received Votes -- Grand Canyon (10), Barton (6), George Mason (5), format. Penn State (5), Ball State (4) 10. David Kisiel, Grand Canyon 3.24 5. Concordia .279 6. Stanford .284 SERVICE ACE AVERAGE 7. BYU .287 1. Micah Ma’a, UCLA 0.64 2. David Wieczorek, Pepperdine 0.39 3. Gabi Garcia Fernandez, BYU 0.35 4. Jordan Hoppe, Concordia 0.34 5. Michael Wexter, Pepperdine 0.33

24 RECORDS

SINGLE SEASON TEAM RECORDS Most Aces: 7, (vs. UCSD, 1/5/19, vs. Princeton, 2/1/18, vs. UC San Diego, 1/14/17 and vs. Stanford, 3/12/93) 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 SINGLE MATCH TEAM RECORDS Most Matches Lost: 16, 2009 Most Kills: 139 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87) Most Matches Played: 41, 1987 (38-3) Fewest Kills: 27 (vs. USC, 4/14/11)* Least Matches Played: 17, 1976 (15-2) Most Errors: 61 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87) Longest Winning Streak: 47 matches, 1983-85 Most Total Attempts: 341 (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87) Longest Home Winning Streak: 83 matches, 1975-82 Fewest Total Attempts: 52 (at George Mason, 1/5/16)* Longest Losing Streak: 5 matches, 2015 and 2011 Highest Hitting Percentage: .666 (vs. LMU, 2/17/84) Most Shutouts: 26 (3-0), 1995 Lowest Hitting Percentage: .041 (vs. Stanford, 4/9/11)* Best Hitting Percentage: .420, 1993 (1891-467-3389, 89g) Lowest Hitting Percentage, Opponent: -.125 Limestone vs. UCLA (at UCSB Tny., Most Kills Per Game: 21.74, 1989 1/10/15 10-16-48)*; -.041 Rutgers-Newark vs. UCLA, 3/16/05 (26-30-97)* Most Service Aces, Season: 232, 2001* Most Service Aces: 15 (vs. Princeton, 2/1/18 and vs. Limestone, at UCSB Most Service Aces Per Game: 2.03, 1998 Tny.,1/10/15)*; 14 (vs. BYU, 4/12/14)*, (vs. USC, 3/7/93) and (vs. Pepper- Most Blocks Per Game: 7.6 (4.16), 1996 dine, 2/3/01)* Most Digs Per Game: 13.5, 1986 Most Block Solos: 17 (vs. Pepperdine, 3/18/83) Most Block Assists: 44 (vs. Hawaii, 4/13/83) SINGLE SEASON INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Longest Match: 3 hours, 45 minutes (vs. UCSB, 2/12/87) Most Total Attempts: 1,298, Paul Nihipali, 1997 Most Kills: 650, , 1994 and Paul Nihipali, 1997 INDIVIDUAL CAREER RECORDS Most Points: 553.5, Steve Klosterman, 2007** Most Kills: 2,096, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 Best Hitting Percentage: .539, Tim Kelly, 1994 Most Attempts: 4,063, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 Most Solo Blocks: 40, Trevor Schirman, 1989 Highest Hitting Percentage: .462, Tim Kelly, 1991-94 Most Block Assists: 203, Scott Morrow, 2000 Most Matches With Double Figure Kills: 101, Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 Most Total Blocks: 221, Trevor Schirman, 1990 Most Total Blocks: 682, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 Most Blocks Per Game: 2.12, Trevor Schirman, 1990 Most Solo Blocks: 120, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 Most Set Assists: 1,848, Brandon Taliaferro, 1998 Most Matches With Double Figure Blocks: 19, Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 Most Matches With Double Figure Blocks: 9, Trevor Schirman, 1990 Most Set Assists: 6,840, Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 Most Digs: 368, Tony Ker, 2008 Most Digs: 1,220, Tony Ker, 2005-08* Most Digs Per Game: 3.2, Tony Ker, 2008 Most Matches With Double Figure Digs: 60, Tony Ker, 2005-2008* Most Service Aces: 67, Micah Ma’a, 2019 Most Aces: 208, Micah Ma’a, 2016-19* Most Services Aces (Freshman): 58, Micah Ma’a, 2016* Most Triple-Doubles: 2, Tom Stillwell, UCLA vs. Lewis, 3/4/97 (11k, 17d, 16bk) / vs. Most Triple Doubles: 2, Tom Stillwell, vs. Lewis, 3/4/97 (11k, 17d, 16b) and vs. BYU, 3/28/97 (19k, 13d, 12bk) and Micah Ma’a, at BYU, 3/14/19 (15k, 44 set BYU, 3/28/97 (19k, 13d, 12b) asst., 15d) / vs. BYU, 4/2/16 (10k, 24 set asst., 14d) Most Matches With Double Figure Digs: 18, Matt Davis, 2000 and Tony Ker, 2008 Last Triple Double: Micah Ma’a, at BYU 3/14/19 (15 kills, 44 set assists, 15 digs)* ATTENDANCE RECORDS Largest International Crowd: 23,000 UCLA vs. Republic of China, 1980, at the SINGLE MATCH INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Chinese Sport and Cultural Center. Most Kills: 52, Paul Nihipali (vs. UCSB, 4/27/96) Largest Pauley Pavilion Crowd: 9,809 UCLA vs. Pepperdine, 1984 NCAA Champi- Consecutive Kills: 31, Steve Klosterman (vs. CSUN, 2/21/07) onship. Most Total Attempts: 89, Paul Nihipali (vs. Lewis, 3/4/97) Team and individual statistics were not kept prior to 1981. Highest Hitting Percentage (min. 10 attempts): .917, Daenan Gyimah (11k-0e- *Record set during a rally scoring season; **2004 was the fi rst season points were kept. 12att, at McKendree, 1/11/19). 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: 5, Gonzalo Quiroga (vs. BYU, 2/4/11)* Consecutive Aces: 4, Jake Arnitz (at USC, 3/28/15)* and Adam Naeve (vs. Pepper- dine, 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)

* = recorded in the rally scoring era Bruin fans turn out for the 2018 NCAA Championship at Pauley Pavilion

25 RECORDS

CAREER LEADERS-1986 present SEASON LEADERS

Kills Kills 1. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 2,096 1. Paul Nihipali, 1997 650 2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 1,800 Jeff Nygaard, 1994 650 3. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 1,587 3. Paul Nihipali, 1996 590 4. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 1,513 4. Adam Naeve, 1998 528 5. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 1,473 5. Paul Nihipali, 1995 525 6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 1,387 6. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 511 7. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 1,374 7. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 473 8. Mark Williams, 1998-01 1,245 8. Steve Klosterman, 2007 472 9. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87 1,237 9. Steve Klosterman, 2006 466 10. Evan Thatcher, 1997-00 1,083 10. Mark Williams, 2000 465 Other: Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 754 Total Blocks Total Blocks 1. Trevor Schirman, 1990 221 1. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 682 2. Scott Morrow, 2000 220 2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 658 3. Tom Stillwell, 1996 213 3. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 544 4. Trevor Schirman, 1989 189 4. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 538 5. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 188 5. Scott Morrow, 2000-03 522 6. Jeff Nygaard, 1994 180 6. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 492 7. Don Dendinger, 1986 177 7. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 466 8. Seth Burnham, 2000 176 Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 8. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 458 9. Tom Stillwell, 1997 175 9. Mike Whitcomb, 1988-91 410 10. Mike Whitcomb, 1989 170 10. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 396 Aces Other: Daenan Gyimah, 2017 290 1. Micah Ma’a, 2019 67 Aces 2. Mark Williams, 2000 63 1. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 208 3. Brandon Taliaferro, 2000 59 2. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 194 4. Micah Ma’a, 2016 58 3. Adam Naeve, 1997-01 178 5. Micah Ma’a, 2018 56 4. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 176 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 56 5. Mark Williams, 1998-01 164 Adam Naeve, 2001 56 6. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 129 Adam Naeve, 1998 56 7. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 123 9. Stein Metzger, 1996 53 8. Stein Metzger, 1993-96 110 10. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 52 9. Kevin Wong, 1992-95 107 Digs 10. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 99 1. Tony Ker, 2008 368 Kevin Ker, 2007-10 99 2. Matt Davis, 2000 364 Other: Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 80 3. Tony Ker, 2006 318 Digs 4. Ozzie Volstad, 1986 308 1. Tony Ker, 2005-08 1,220 5. Adam Shrader, 2002 303 2. Adam Shrader, 2001-04 1,089 6. Paul George, 2006 272 3. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-2000 831 7. Tom Hastings, 2010 270 4. Fred Robins, 1996-99 777 8. Tony Ker, 2005 269 5. Mark Williams, 1998-2001 752 9. Evan Mottram, 2013 267 Adam Naeve, 1997-2001 6. Erik Sullivan, 1992-95 747 Adam Shrader, 2004 267 7. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87 746 Set Assists 8. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-2010 741 1. Brandon Taliaferro, 1998 1,848 9. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 728 2. Brandon Taliaferro, 2000 1,800 10. JT Hatch, 2015- 634 3. Stein Metzger, 1996 1,792 Set Assists 4. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997 1,707 1. Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-2000 6,840 5. Stein Metzger, 1994 1,589 2. Stein Metzger, 1993-96 5,158 6. Rich Nelson, 2002 1,546 3. Rich Nelson, 2000-03 4,846 7. Brandon Taliaferro, 1999 1,485 4. Mike Sealy, 1990-93 4,749 8. Rich Nelson, 2001 1,477 5. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 3,427 6. Kevin Ker, 2007-2010 3,173 7. Matt Wade, 2006-2009 3,166 8. Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06 3,104

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 defi nitions 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 fi fth 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 fi fth set. Offi cial NCAA re- cords began with the 1981 season. In 2011, individual season blocking categories were added for seasons since 2001. In refl ection 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 some early years. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-2010

26 RECORDS CAREER LEADERS SEASON LEADERS 1981-PRESENT Hitting Percentage (Minimum 300 attempts) 1. Tim Kelly, 1994 .539 Hitting Percentage (Minimum 1000 attempts) 2. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 .528 1. Daenan Gyimah, 2017 - .481 3. Paul Johnson, 2005 .491 2. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 .462 4. Jeff Nygaard, 1993 .487 3. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 .448 5. Thomas Amberg, 2012 .485 4. Chris Peña, 2001-04 .438 6. Mitch Stahl, 2016 .471 5. Danny Farmer, 1996-99 .42772 7. Tim Kelly, 1993 .470 6. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 .42771 8. , 1981 .466 7. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 .424 9. Weston Dunlap, 2012 .461 8. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 .419 10. Spencer Rowe, 2013 .459 9. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 .407 10. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 .404 Kills Per Game (Minimum 300 attempts) Kills Per Game 1. Jeff Nygaard, 1994 6.98 (Minimum 1000 attempts) 2. Paul Nihipali, 1997 6.19 1. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 5.40 3. Paul Nihipali, 1996 6.14 2. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 5.14 4. Paul Nihipali, 1995 5.64 3. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 4.60 5. Adam Naeve, 1998 5.50 4. , 1990-93 4.28 6. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 5.16 Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 5. Rich Bland, 1990-93 4.17 7. Ozzie Volstad, 1987 4.96 6. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 3.84 8. Ed Ratledge, 2000 4.79 7. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 3.52 9. Adam Naeve, 1999 4.65 8. Jeff Williams, 1984-87 3.48 10. Trevor Schirman, 1989 4.38 9. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 3.43 10. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 3.38 Blocking Average (Minimum 75 games/sets played) 1. Trevor Schirman, 1990 2.12 Blocking Average (Minimum 200 games/sets played) 2. Tom Stillwell, 1996 2.08 1. Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 1.88 3. Jeff Nygaard, 1992 2.03 2. Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 1.75 4. Jeff Nygaard, 1994 1.93 3. Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 1.72 5. Jeff Nygaard, 1995 1.89 4. Mike Whitcomb, 1988-91 1.58 6. Trevor Schirman, 1989 1.85 5. Tim Kelly, 1991-94 1.55 Scott Morrow, 2000 1.85 6. Don Dendinger, 1985-88* 1.51 8. Tim Kelly, 1991 1.82 7. Adam Naeve, 1997-99, 2001 1.41 9. Tom Stillwell, 1997 1.804 8. Scott Morrow, 2000-03 1.40 10. Adam Naeve, 1999 1.802 9. Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 1.26 10. Ozzie Volstad, 1984-87** 1.23

*Th ree-year average. **Two-year average.

Spencer Rowe, 2011-14 GREAT FACES IN BRUIN HISTORY

Undated Alumni Team photo (l-r, back row): Steve Gulnac, Ricci Luyties, Steve Salmons, Dave Mochalski, Paul Johnson, 2002-05 Dave Saunders, Randy Stoklos, Greg Giovanazzi, Doug Partie and Wally Martin. (l-r, front row): Mark Kinnison, Mark Anderson, , Mike Sondheimer, Dave Brown, Karch Kiraly, Mike Timmons and John Zajec.

27 RECORDS INDIVIDUAL-CAREER Digs 2001-PRESENT FROM START OF RALLY SCORING ERA 1. Tony Ker, 2005-08 1,220 2. Adam Shrader, 2001-04 1,089 Hitting Percentage (Min 230 Att/Yr) 3. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 741 1. Daenan Gyimah, 2017- .481 4. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 728 2. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 .448 5. JT Hatch, 2015-18 634 3. Adam Naeve, 2001 .447 6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 630 4. Chris Peña, 2001-04 .438 7. Tom Hastings, 2008-11 584 5. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 .407 8. Hagen Smith, 2014-17 484 6. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 .404 9. Rich Nelson, 2001-03 483 7. Scott Morrow, 2001-03 .381 10. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 472 8. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 .373 9. Allan Vince, 2003-05 .343 Block Solos 1. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 44 Kills (Min 230 Att/Yr) 2. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 42 1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 1,513 3. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 40 2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 1,473 4. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 39 3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 1,387 5. Nick Vogel, 2009-12 36 4. Jake Arnitz, 2015- 1,048 6. Chris Peña, 2001-04 35 5. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 963 7. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-04 32 Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 6. Chris Peña, 2001-04 920 8. Daenan Gyimah, 2017 - 31 7. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 883 9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 29 8. Robart Page, 2011-14 844 10. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 27 9. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 839 10. Sean O’Malley, 2006-09 779 Block Assists Other: Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 754 1. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 424 2. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 325 3. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 322 Total Attacks (Min 230 Att/Yr) 1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 3,262 4. Scott Morrow, 2001-03 281 2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 3,116 5. Nick Vogel, 2009-12 263 3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 3,090 6. Daenan Gyimah, 2017 - 259 4. Jake Arnitz, 2015- 2,272 7. Chris Peña, 2001-04 256 5. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 1,943 8. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 254 6. Robart Page, 2011-14 1,899 9. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 253 7. JT Hatch, 2015-18 1,884 10. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 248 8. Jack Polales, 2009-12 1,732 9. Sean O’Malley, 2006-09 1,714 Total Blocks 10. Chris Peña, 2001-04 1,680 1. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 466 Other: Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 1,274 2. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 365 3. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 345 Set Assists 4. Scott Morrow, 2001-03 302 Robart Page, 2011-14 1. Rich Nelson, 2001-03 4,346 5. Nick Vogel, 2009-12 299 2. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 3,427 6. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 292 3. Matt Wade, 2006-09 3,166 7. Chris Peña, 2001-04 291 4. Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06 3,104 8. Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 290 5. Hagen Smith, 2014-17 2,110 9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 283 6. Kevin Ker, 2007-10 2,021 10. Weston Dunlap, 2008-12 267 7. Kyle Caldwell, 2009-12 1,413 8. Steve O’Dell, 2013-14 1,187 9. Alex Scattareggia, 2009-11 1,149 Total Points 10. Julio “Gaby” Acevedo, 2005 575 1. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 1,757.0 2. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 1,718.0 3. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 1,698.5 Aces 4. Jake Arnitz, 2015-18 1,232.0 1. Micah Ma’a, 2016-19 208 5. Paul Johnson, 2002-05 1,175.0 2. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 194 6. Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 1,164.0 3. Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 129 7. Chris Peña, 2001-04 1,158.0 4. Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 99 8. Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 1,094.0 Kevin Ker, 2007-2010 99 9. JT Hatch, 2015-18 995.5 6. Dylan Missry, 2016-19 90 10. Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 994.5 Paul Johnson, 2002-05 90 8. JT Hatch, 2015-18 82 9. Daenan Gyimah, 2017- 80 Paul George, 2005-07 10. Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 79

28 RECORDS INDIVIDUAL SINGLE SEASON

2001-PRESENT FROM START OF RALLY SCORING ERA

Points Block Solos Kills Per Set (Minimum 300 attempts) 1. Steve Klosterman, 2007 553.5 1. Paul Johnson, 2005 19 1. Steve Klosterman, 2007 4.29 2. Paul Johnson, 2005 551.0 2. Nick Scheftic, 2006 18 2. Steve Klosterman, 2006 4.12 3. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 547.0 3. Allan Vince, 2005 16 3. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 4.04 4. Steve Klosterman, 2006 528.0 4. Paul Johnson, 2004 15 4. Garrett Muagututia, 2010 3.90 5. Garrett Muagututia, 2010 509.5 Chris Peña, 2003 15 5. Steve Klosterman, 2004 3.88 6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 504.0 6. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 14 6. Jonathan Acosta, 2003 3.75 7. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 500.0 Paul George, 2006 14 7. Robart Page, 2014 3.72 8. Christian Hessenauer, 2018 476.5 Garrett Muagututia, 2008 14 8. Matt Komer, 2002 3.71 9. Paul George, 2006 474.0 Sean O’Malley, 2009 14 9. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 3.70 10. Nick Scheftic, 2006 457.5 Thomas Amberg, 2011 14 10. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 3.68

Kills Block Assists Set Assists Average (Min. 300 assists.; Assists in parentheses) 1. Garrett Muagututia, 2008 473 1. Thomas Amberg, 2012 141 1. Rich Nelson, 2002 (1,546) 13.68 2. Steve Klosterman, 2007 472 2. Paul Johnson, 2005 140 2. Dennis Gonzalez, 2004 (1,066) 13.67 3. Steve Klosterman, 2006 466 3. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 137 3. Rich Nelson, 2003 (1,323) 12.97 4. Garrett Muagututia, 2010 446 4. Adam Naeve, 2001 125 4. Rich Nelson, 2001 (1,477) 12.63 5. Matt Komer, 2002 434 5. Scott Morrow, 2001 121 5. Dennis Gonzalez, 2006 (974) 12.18 6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 420 6. Mitch Stahl, 2016 114 6. Dennis Gonzalez, 2005 (976) 12.05 7. Paul Johnson, 2005 413 7. Jamie Diefenbach, 2007 111 7. Matt Wade, 2008 (1,068) 11.48 8. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 411 David Russell, 2006 111 8. Connor Bannan, 2013 (776) 11.25 9. Cameron Mount, 2002 408 9. Nick Scheftic, 2006 109 9. Steve O’Dell, 2014 (602) 10.95 10. Paul George, 2006 400 10. Jamie Diefenbach, 2008 108 10. Micah Ma’a, 2018 (1,319) 10.55 Total Attacks Thomas Amberg, 2009 108 Ace Average (Min. 20 aces.; Aces in parentheses) 1. Steve Klosterman, 2006 1,016 Total Blocks 1. Micah Ma’a, 2019 (67) 0.64 2. Steve Klosterman, 2007 994 1. Paul Johnson, 2005 159 2. Mitch Stahl, 2017 (42) 0.55 3. Garrett Muagututia, 2007 958 2. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 151 3. Mark Williams, 2001 (51) 0.51 4. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 897 3. Thomas Amberg, 2012 150 4. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 (56) 0.50 5. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 889 4. Adam Naeve, 2001 135 5. Micah Ma’a, 2016 (58) 0.48 6. Matt Komer, 2002 871 5. Scott Morrow, 2001 131 6. Adam Naeve, 2001 (56) 0.47 7. Robart Page, 2014 848 6. Nick Scheftic, 2006 127 7. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2012 (47) 0.46 8. Cameron Mount, 2002 835 7. Mitch Stahl, 2016 124 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 (52) 0.46 9. Christian Hessenauer, 2018 824 David Russell, 2006 124 9. Micah Ma’a, 2018 (56) 0.45 10. Paul George, 2006 806 9. Jamie Diefenbach, 2007 123 10. Paul Johnson, 2005 (49) 0.41 Set Assists 10. Thomas Amberg, 2009 118 1. Rich Nelson, 2002 1,546 Hitting Percentage (Minimum 300 attempts) Digs Average (Min.100 digs. Digs in parentheses) 2. Rich Nelson, 2001 1,477 1. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 .528 1. Tony Ker, 2008 (368) 3.23 3. Rich Nelson, 2003 1,323 2. Paul Johnson, 2005 .491 2. Tony Ker, 2006 (318) 2.79 4. Micah Ma’a, 2018 1,319 3. Thomas Amberg, 2012 .486 3. Adam Shrader, 2002 (303) 2.71 5. Matt Wade, 2008 1,068 4. Mitch Stahl, 2016 .471 4. Adam Shrader, 2003 (263) 2.53 6. Dennis Gonzalez, 2004 1,066 5. Weston Dunlap, 2012 .461 5. Tony Ker, 2007 (265) 2.52 7. Alex Scattareggia, 2011 1,057 6. Spencer Rowe, 2013 .459 6. Tony Ker, 2005 (269) 2.49 8. Kyle Caldwell, 2012 1,023 7. Chris Peña, 2003 .458 7. Adam Shrader, 2004 (267) 2.47 9. Dennis Gonzalez, 2006 974 8. Adam Naeve, 2001 .447 8. Evan Mottram , 2013 (267) 2.10 10. Micah Ma’a, 2019 851 9. Chris Peña, 2004 .446 9. Adam Shrader, 2001 (256) 2.08 Aces Weston Dunlap, 2011 .446 10. Jackson Bantle, 2015 (177) 2.06 Paul George, 2006 (272) 2.06 1. Micah Ma’a, 2019 67 2. Micah Ma’a, 2016 58 Blocking Average (Min. 50 total blocks.-Tot. Blks in parentheses) 3. Micah Ma’a, 2018 56 1. Thomas Amberg, 2012 (150) 1.43 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014 56 2. Paul Johnson, 2005 (159) 1.34 Adam Naeve, 2001 56 3. Thomas Amberg, 2009 (118) 1.33 6. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2013 52 4. Scott Morrow, 2002 (106) 1.23 7. Mark Williams, 2001 51 5. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 (151) 1.22 8. Paul Johnson, 2005 49 Jamie Diefenbach, 2007 (123) 1.22 9. Gonzalo Quiroga, 2012 47 7. Mitch Stahl, 2016 (124) 1.19 10. Daenan Gyimah, 2018 46 8. Scott Morrow, 2003 (65) 1.18181 Matt Komer, 2002 46 9. Scott Morrow, 2001 (131) 1.18180 10. Paul Johnson, 2002 (64) 1.16 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 269 7. Adam Shrader, 2004 267 8. Tony Ker, 2007 265 9. Adam Shrader, 2003 263 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 10. Adam Shrader, 2001 256

29 RECORDS

A H K Julio “Gaby” Acevedo, 05 Matt Hanley, 11 Jonah Kay, 2019 Jonathan Acosta, 02-03-04-05 Albert Hanneman, 90 Tim Kelly, 91-92-93-94 Jim Adomoli, 60-61-62-63 Bill Hansard, 77 K.C. Keller, 76-77-78-79 Mike Allio, 64-66-68 Jason Harper, 95, 96 Jamey Ker, 09, 11 Thomas Amberg, 09-10-11-12 Thomas Hastings, 08-11 Kevin Ker, 07-08-09-10 Rick Amon, 78-79-81 JT Hatch, 15-16-17-18 Tony Ker, 05-06-07-08 Tom Anderson, 60-61 Carl Henkel, 88-89-90-91 Trent Kersten 13-14-15 Mark Anderson, 80-82 Scott Herdman, 89-90-91 Kirk Kilgour, 69-70-71 John Anselmo, 89-91-92-93 John Herren, 73-74-75 Mark Kinnison, 80-81-82 Jake Arnitz, 15-16-17-18 Bruce Herring, 69-70-71 Karch Kiraly, 79-80-81-82 Peter Ashley, 75-76-77 Christian Hessenauer, 15-16-17-18 Gordon Kleinpeter, 60-61 Dane Holtzman, 69-70 Steve Klosterman, 04-05-06-07 B Jerald Hyde, 62-63 Andy Klussmann, 83-84-85-86 Sam Kobrine, 18-19 Aleksandar Babic, 91 Matt Komer, 99-00-01-02 Carl Bailey, 60-61 I Mark Knudsen, 92 Colin Bailey, 18 Chris Irvin, 73-74-75 Kris Kraushaar, 02-03-04-05 Andy Banachowski, 65-68 Richard Irvin, 70-71-72 Connor Bannan, 11 Kene Izuchukwu, 12 Jackson Bantle, 14-15-16-17 L Tom Barr, 64 Arne Lamberg, 85-86-87 Michael Beals 13-14 J Dan Landry, 90-91-92-93 Bob Becker, 64 Andy Klussmann Jeff Jacobs, 72-73 Chris Lee, 68 Ed Becker, 69-70 Charlie Jackson, 96-97-98 Bob Leonard, 71-72-73-74 John Bekins, d., 73-74-75 Mike Denver, 92 Ian Jackson, 06 Bill Levin, 63 Pete Blackman, 62 Don Dendinger, 85-86-87-88 Ryal Jagd, 10-11 Chen Levitan, 10 Rich Bland, 90-92-93 Jamie Diefenbach, 06-07-08 Marcin Jagoda, 01-04 Phil Leymeyer, 60-61-62 Aaron Boone, 95 Mike Diehl, 92-93 Barry Johnson, 62 David Lin, 00 Brian Boone, 89-90 Mike Desroches, 63-64 Paul Johnson, 02-03-04-05 Phil Lingman, 65 Dylan Bowermaster, 07-10 Aaron Dodd, 04-05 Sam Jones, 18-19 Ricci Luyties, 81-82-83-84 Jeremy Brandt, 94 Kurt Donaldson, 74 Jim Brazier, 72 Steve Drummy, 61-62-63-65 Jonathan Bridgeman, 10-11-13 Weston Dunlap, 08-10-11-12 Doug Brooks, 75-76-77 Dave Brown, 78-79 Doug Brown, 74-75 E Steve Burian, 63-64-65-66 Steve Eddy, 66 Ian Burnham, 01 Peter Ehrman, 78-79-80-81 Seth Burnham, 97-98-00 Dale Eicks, 68 Keith Erickson, 65 C Ian Eschenberg, 19 Gordon Evans, 60-63 Kyle Caldwell, 09-11-12 James Calonico, 64 Jeff Campbell, 85 F John Carmack, 63 Danny Farmer, 96-97-98-99 Scott Carter, 67 Michael Fisher, 14-15-16-17 Jeremy Casebeer, 10-11-12 Mike Franklin, 72-73-75-76 Eric Chaghouri, 05-06-07 Ken Freeman, 71-72-73 Grant Chalmers, 14-15 Steve Fritzen, 67-68 Tom Chamales, 73 Seth Champi, 99-00 Roger Clark, 81-82-83-84 Jamie Cleary, 87-88 G Denny Cline, 74-75-76 Mike Garcia, 88-90 George Conkey, 66-67-68 Gray Garrett, 02-03-05 Jim Conkey, 62 Paul George, 05-06-07 Dan Conners, 01 Davis Gillett, 16-17 Greg Coon, 00-01 Greg Giovanazzi, 76-77-78 Ron Coon, 71-72-73 Wally Goodrick, 82-83-84 Buddy Cox, 74 Dennis Gonzalez, 03-04-05-06 Anthony Curci, 85-87-88-89 Stan Gordon, 67-68 Mike Gottschall, 75-76-77 Matt Grace, 99 D Larry Griebenow, 71-72 Matt Davis, 97-98-99-00 Steve Gulnac, 79-80-81-83 Jesse Debban, 01-03 Kurt Gunderson, 83-84 Denny Cline (r) and Greg Giovanazzi Ned DeGroot, 65 Daenan “Kofi ” Gyimah, 17-18-19 Andor Gyulai, 97-98 30 RECORDS

M Chris Pliha, 92 Steve Suttich, 76-77 Jack Polales, 09-11 Bill Suwara, 87-88-89 Austin Matautia, 19 Brennan Prahler, 02-03-05 Ernie Suwara, 65-66-67 Micah Ma’a, 16-17-18-19 Scott Swartzbaugh, 86 Grant Maleski, 18-19 David Swatik, 91-92 Eric Matheis, 15-16-18 Q Mike McCann, 67-68 Matt McKinney, 03-04-05 Gonzalo Quiroga, 11-12-13-14 T Bjorn Maaseide, 90 Ed Machado, 68-69-70-71 Brandon Taliaferro, 97-98-99-00 Mike Madison, 68-69 R Matt Taylor, 93-94-95-96 Lee Mason, 60-61 Doug Rabe, 75-76-77-78 Mark Tedsen, 87-88-89-90 Oliver Martin, 15-16-17-18 Art Rasmussen, 82-83-84 Evan Thatcher, 97-98-99-00 Wally Martin, 81-82-83-84 Ed Ratledge, 99-00 Craig Thompson, 69 Bob Thomson, 68-71-72 Jim Menges, 72-73-74 Ryan Ratelle, 06-08-09 Mike Timmons, 78-79-80-81 Robert Metcalf, 70 Brandon Rattray, 19 Stein Metzger, 93-94-95-96 Toshi Toyoda, 69 Jake Reeves, 14-15-16 James Turner, 96 Joe Mica, 75-76-77-79 Neil Riddell, 83-85 Greg Miller, 66-67 Kent Robinett, 87-88 Dylan Missry, 16-17-18-19 Fred Robins, 96-97-98-99 Dave Mochalski, 82 U Brian Rofer, 78-79-80 Scott Morrow, 00-01-02-03 Henry Unger, 60-61 Ben Moselle, 96-97-98 Scott Rolles, 78-80 Evan Mottram, 12-13 Spencer Rowe, 11-12-13-14 Cameron Mount, 00-01-02 Larry Rundle, 65-66 V Garrett Muagututia, 07-10 David Russell, 02-03-05-06 Mike Ryan, 66-67-68 Eric Vallely, 96-97-98 Sean Myhill, 77 Scott Vegas, 10-11-12-13 Pat Ryan, 68 Allan Vince, 03-04-05 N Nick Vogel, 09-10-11-12 S Dan Vrebalovich, 85 Adam Naeve, 97-98-99-01 Asbjorn Volstad, 84-85-86-87 Rich Nelson, 00-01-02-03 Spencer Sachs 16-17-18-19 George A. Negrete, 76 Steve Salmons, 77-78-79-81 Trong Nguyen, 94-95-96-97 Dave Saunders, 79-80-81-82 W David Nichols, 74-75-77 J.B. Saunders, 87-88-90 Matt Wade, 06-07-08-09 Shaun Nichols, 07 Al Scates, 60-61-62-63 Benny Wang, 87-88-89-90 Paul Nihipali, 94-95-96-97 Alex Scattareggia, 10-11 Rick Watson, 64 Matt Noonan, 94-95-96 Dave Schaffer, 67 James Welch, 70-71 Mike Normand, 73-74 Nick Scheftic, 03-04-05-06 Kris Welch, 01 J.R. Norris, 19 Oren Sher, 89-90 Brian Wells, 93-94-95-96 Jeff Nygaard, 92-93-94-95 Trevor Schirman, 87-88-89-90 J.T. Wenger, 01-03-04 Andy Schutz, 62-63-64-65 Jeff Williams, 84-85-86-87 O Damien Scott, 04-05-06 Mark Williams, 98-99-00-01 Dick Scott, 60-61-62-63 Mike Whitcomb, 88-89-90-91 Dave Olbright, 76-77-78 Larry Scott, 74-77 Matt Whitaker, 85-86-87-89 Steve O’Dell, 13-14 Mike Sealy, 90-91-92-93 Jeff Woodley, 08 Sean O’Malley, 06-07-08-09 Jimmy Sepulveda, 02 Kevin Wong, 92-93-94-95 Chris Orem, 19 Ian Sequeira, 13-14 Tim Otterman, 84-85 Joe Shirley, 69-70 Y Adam Shrader, 01-02-03-04 P Matt Shubin, 03-04 Court Young, 98-99 Mark Slevcove, 78-80-81-82 Matt Younggren, 19 Robart Page, 2011-12-13-14 Andrew Smith, 80 Kyle Palmer, 13-14 Hagen Smith, 14-15-16-17 Ian Parish, 18 Z Kent Smith, 81 Adam Parks, 19 John Zajec, 70-71-72 Parker Smith, 02 Alex Parks, 18-19 John Zappia, 14-15-16 Doug Partie, 81-82-83-84 Sinjin Smith, 76-77-78-79 Saul Zemaitaitis, 03-04 Kendall Partie, 13 Matt Sonnichsen, 86-87-88-89 Clayton Paullin, 13-14-15 John Speraw, 92-93-94-95 Bill Pearlman, 62-64-65 Eric Sprague, 15-16-17 Garland Peed V, 18-19 Mitch Stahl, 14-15-16-17 Chris Peña, 01-02-03-04 Mike Stafford, 86-88 Cole Pender, 19 Tom Stillwell, 95-96-97-98 Sabin Perkins, 74 Randy Stoklos, 80 Brett Perrine, 07-08-09-10 Steve Stovitz, 84-85-86 Ghost Photo: Karch Kiraly sets Ricci Luyties Matt Perry, 89 D.J. Stromath, 06-08-09 (11) in the 1981 NCAA fi nals at UC Santa Fred Sturm, 72-73-75-76 Beau Peters, 04-07 Barbara. The Bruins defeated USC in fi ve Erik Sullivan, 92-93-94-95 Ross Pier, 91-92-93-94 games for their eighth NCAA title. Reed Sunahara, 82-83-84-86

31 RECORDS

UCLA MVB UNIFORM HISTORY #5 #10 (1979-Present) Sam Kobrine, 2017-18-19 Grant Maleski, 2018-19 Teddy Goetz, 2009-10 Reece Salmons, 2017 #1 Beau Peters, 2006-07 Jake Reeves, 2014-16 Garland Peed V, 2018-19 Paul Johnson, 2002-05 Connor Bannan, 2012-13 Jackson Bantle, 2014-17 Mark Williams, 1998-01 Alex Scattareggia, 2011 Jamey Ker, 2011-12 Stein Metzger, 1995-96 Brett Perrine, 2007-10 Cooper O’Connor, 2010 Trong Nguyen, 1994 Damien Scott, 2003-06 Jamey Ker, 2009 Mike Diehl, 1992-93 Greg Coon, 2001 Tony Ker, 2005-08 Rand Rognlien, 1991 John Coon, 2000 David Russell, 2002-03 Mike Garcia, 1990 Paul Nihipali, 1994-97 Ian Burnham, 2001 J.B. Saunders, 1987-88 Dan Landry, 1990-93 Seth Burnham, 1997-00 Neil Riddell, 1983-86 Wally Goodrick, 1982-84 Kanoa Ostrem, 1991 Brian Rofer, 1979-81 Jon Weiglin, 1980 Benny Wang, 1989-90 Jeff Williams, 1984-87 #6 #11 Mark Slevcove, 1980-82 Jonah Kay, 2016-19 Cole Johnson, 2019 Dave Brown, 1979 Clayton Paullin, 2013-15 Dominic Brousard, 2016-17 Weston Dunlap, 2011-12 Aaron Boone, 1995 #2 Jeff Woodley, 2006-09 Stein Metzger, 1993-94 J.R. Norris IV, 2018-19 Gray Garrett, 2002-05 Aleksandar Babic, 1991-92 Davis Gillett, 2016-17 Seth Champi, 1999-00 Brian Maaseide, 1990 Steve O’Dell, 2013-15 Matt Grace, 1997 Matt Sonnichsen, 1986 Mitchell Johnson, 2010 Todd Eliassen, 1996 Ricci Luyties, 1981-84 Sean O’Malley, 2006-09 Kevin Wong, 1992-94 Randy Stoklos, 1980 Beau Peters, 2004-05 Albert Hanneman, 1990 Jesse Debban, 2001-03 Allan Chao, 1986 #12 Eric Vallely, 1997-98 Tim Otterman, 1984-85 Dylan Missry, 2016-19 Kevin Wong, 1995 Gary Constantino, 1979 Ian Sequeira, 2013-14 Greg Gratteau, 1994 Evan Mottram, 2012 John Anselmo, 1991-93 #7 Spencer Rowe, 2011 Mike Stafford, 1986, 88 Ian Parish, 2018-19 Ted Slaughter, 2009 Ecko Osorio, 1983 Mitch Stahl, 2014-17 Dylan Bowermaster, 2007-08 Peter Ehrman, 1979-81 Scott Vegas, 2013 Sam Nelson, 2000 Nick Vogel, 2011-12 Donald Puathasnanon, 1997-98 #3 Garrett Muagututia, 2007-10 Matt Taylor, 1994-96 Alex Parks, 2018-19 Jonathan Acosta, 2001-05 Jeremy Brandt, 1992 Michael Fisher, 2014-17 Trong Nguyen, 1995-97 J.B. Saunders, 1990-91 Evan Mottram, 2013 Mike Sealy, 1990-93 Matt Perry, 1989 Kristian Kuld, 2012 Mark Snudsen, 1989 Don Dendinger, 1985-88 Tom Hastings, 2009-10 Dan Vrebalovich, 1985 Art Rasmussen, 1982, 84 Dennis Gonzalez, 2003-06 Kent Smith, 1981 Kurt Gunderson, 1980 Paul Jocas, 2001 Scott Rolles, 1980 Brandon Taliaferro, 1997-00 #13 Matt Noonan, 1995-96 #8 Micah Ma’a 2016-19 Ross Pier, 1991-94 Kevin Kobrine, 2019 Mark Anderson, 1982 Matt Sonnichsen, 1987-89 Eric Matheis, 2015-18 Roger Clark, 1982-84 Jonathan Bridgeman, 2013-14 #14 Kyle Caldwell, 2009-12 Sam Jones, 2017-19 #4 Aaron Dodd, 2004-06 Trent Kersten, 2013-15 Cole Pender, 2019 Kris Welch, 2001 Jack Polales, 2009-12 Oliver Martin, 2014-18 Jared Dannis, 1998 James Scilacci, 2008 Matthew Hanley, 2011-12 Brian Wells, 1995-96 Steve Klosterman, 2004-07 Chen Levitan, 2010 David Swatik, 1991-93 Scott Morrow, 2000-03 Cooper O’Connor, 2007-08 Mark Tedsen, 1990 Fred Robins, 1996-99 Blake Taylor, 2006 Matt Whitaker, 1985-87 John Speraw, 1992-95 J.T. Wenger, 2004 Mike Whitcomb, 1990-91 Parker Smith, 2001 #9 Rich Bland, 1989 Matt Davis, 1997-00 Brandon Rattray, 2019 Anthony Curci, 1985-88 Eric Vallely, 1996 JT Hatch, 2015-18 Wallace Martin, 1980-84 Matt Noonan, 1994 Julio Acevedo, 2005 Mike Denver, 1991-94 Matthew Acosta, 2004 Jamie Cleary, 1985-88 Jimmy Sepulveda, 2002-03 Kelly Ferris, 1983 Evan Thatcher, 1997-00 Dave Saunders, 1979-82 Jeff Nygaard, 1992-95 Mike Stafford, 1989 Andy Klussman, 1983-86 Andrew Smith, 1979-81

32 RECORDS

#15 #20 #26 Daniel Matheney, 2019 Colin Bailey, 2018 Kris Kraushaar, 2003-05 Jake Arnitz, 2015-18 Kendall Partie, 2014 Ryan Kittel, 2000 Robart Page, 2011-14 Ben Moselle, 1996-98 Andor Gyulai, 1996-98 Jack Mergenthaler, 2010 Brett Grube, 1994 Mike Garcia, 1986 Matt Wade, 2007-09 Mark Shoptaw, 1993 Randy Sherwood, 1984-85 David Russell, 2005-06 Mark Knudsen, 1991-92 Rich Nelson, 2000-03 Trevor Schirman, 1987-90 #27 Danny Farmer, 1996-99 Doug Partie, 1982-84 Ryal Jagd, 2010-12 Erik Sullivan, 1992-95 K.C. Keller, 1979 Kristian Kuld, 2009 Carl Henkel, 1990-91 Matt Shubin, 2002-06 #21 David Lin, 2001 #16 Spencer Sachs, 2016-19 Court Young, 1999 Daenan “Kofi ” Gyimah, 2017-19 Tom Hastings, 2011 Kent Robinett, 1987-88 Grant Chalmers, 2014-15 Kent Kraushaar, 2009 Mike Timmons, 1979-81 Dane Worley, 2011, 13 Paul George, 2005-07 Weston Dunlap, 2008-10 Chris Pena, 2001-04 #28 Kent Kraushaar, 2007 Greg Gratteau, 1996 Kene Izuchukwu, 2012-13 Nathan Bosza, 2006 Jason Harper, 1994 Nick Vogel, 2009-10 Paul George, 2004 Adam Peacocke, 1992 James Jessen, 2005 Cameron Mount, 2000-02 Bjorn Maaseide, 1991 Brian Boone, 1989 Evan Thatcher, 1996 Bill Suwara, 1985-89 Reed Sunahara, 1982-84, 1986 Jeremy Brandt, 1994 Bill Morris, 1984 Rich Bland, 1990-93 Scott Ford, 1979-81 Arne Lamberg, 1983, 85-87 #29 Carl Henkel, 1989-90 #22 Jeff Campbell, 1985 #17 Adam Parks, 2018-19 Steve Salmons, 1979-81 Sam Burgi, 2019 Hagen Smith, 2014-17 Christian Hessenauer, 2015-18 Scott Leslie, 1991 Spencer Rowe, 2012-14 Dave Michalski, 1986 #30 Dylan Bowermaster, 2010 Dave Mochalski, 1982 Jeremy Casebeer, 2008-12 D.J. Stromath, 2006-09 Sinjin Smith, 1979 Mark Lovein, 2005-07 Allan Vince, 2004-05 Mike Whitcomb, 1988-89 Tom Stillwell, 1995-98 #23 Steve Gulnac, 1979-82 Brian Boone, 1990-92 Austin Matautia, 2019 Matt Whitaker, 1989 Gonzalo Quiroga, 2011-14 #31 Kurt Gunderson, 1983-84 Ryan Ratelle, 2006-09 Karch Kiraly, 1979-82 Rick Bankson, 1980 Patrick Nihipali, 2003 Dan Conners, 2001 #32 #18 James Turner, 1995-96 Michael Beals, 2013-14 Chris Orem, 2018-19 Tim Kelly, 1991-94 Matt Wade, 2006 Kyle Palmer, 2014 Mark Tedsen, 1987-89 Oren Sher, 1989 Thomas Amberg, 2009-12 Scott Swartzbaugh, 1983, 85-86 Ian Jackson, 2007 Kevin Taguchi, 1982 Brennan Prahler, 2002-05 Rick Amon, 1979-81 #33 Adam Naeve, 2001 Phil Darin, 2011 Eric Chaghouri, 2005-07 Greg Coon, 2000 #24 Adam Naeve, 1997-99 Marcin Jagoda, 2003-04 Matt Younggren, 2019 Brett Grube, 1995-96 Adam Shrader, 2001-04 Brian Wells, 1993-94 Ed Ratledge, 1999-00 #34 Steve Lucas, 1992 John Zappia, 2014-16 Jason Harper, 1996 Scott Herdman, 1989-91 Alex Scattareggia, 2009-10 Monty Smith, 1994 Benny Wang, 1987-88 Matt Shubin, 2003-04 Asbjorn Volstad, 1984-87 Mark Kinnison, 1979-82 #19 #36 Ian Eschenberg, 2019 #25 Jonathan Bridgeman, 2010 Eric Sprague, 2014-17 Kevin Ker, 2007-10 Kendall Partie, 2013 Matt McKinney, 2003-05 #39 Scott Vegas, 2011-12 Matt Komer, 1999-02 Scott Vegas, 2010 Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-09 Court Young, 1996 Saul Zemaitaitis, 2003-04 , 1989 Charlie Jackson, 1996-98 #45 Steve Stovitz, 1984-86 Steve Lucas, 1994 Bill Dolby, 1979 Joe Mica, 1979 Chris Pliha, 1991-94 Oren Sher, 1990 #51 Anthony Curci, 1989 Shaun Nichols, 2007-09 Carl Brittain, 1982 Mark Anderson, 1980

33 RECORDS

Since 1970, UCLA has won 19 NCAA volleyball titles, all under the direction of coach 1979 - AT UCLA Al Scates. Among UCLA sports, that total is a school record. Below are capsule After a two-year title drought, summaries of UCLA’s 19 NCAA title teams. The 19 titles for a single sport rank tied the Bruins returned to the NCAA for 10th-most among all Division I programs (fi rst is Oklahoma State wrestling which Championships on their home has captured 34 titles). court unbeaten and primed to be- come collegiate volleyball’s fi rst 1970 - AT UCLA undefeated team. Despite drop- The Bruins won the fi rst NCAA championship in Pauley Pavilion by surviving a round-robin ping the fi rst game, 12-15 to USC, tournament and easily sweeping Long Beach State in the fi nal. The Bruins’ Dane Holtzman Joe Mica sparked the comeback (MVP), and All-Tournament selections Kirk Kilgour and Ed Becker gave coach Al Scates that gave UCLA its historic 31-0 the fi rst of 19 title trophies. season. Sinjin Smith was voted MVP and Steve Salmons, Peter 1971 - AT UCLA Ehrman and Mica were named to Again UCLA played host and repeated as champion. The Bruins, despite an easy victory the All-Tournament team. in their fi rst match, survived the tough round-robin pool play format where they were extended to three games twice. In the fi nals, UCLA defeated UC Santa Barbara in three 1981 - AT UC SANTA games. Kirk Kilgour ended a brilliant UCLA career by sharing Co-MVP honors with the BARBARA Gauchos’ Tim Bonynge. The Bruins’ Larry Griebenow and Ed Machado were All-Tour- UCLA overcame injuries to win Joe Mica earned NCAA All-Tournament Team honors nament selections. a fi ve-game match against arch in 1979. rival USC. The Trojans led 5-1 1972 - AT BALL STATE and 9-7 in the fi fth game, but The Bruins won their third consecutive title All-Tournament selection Steve Salmons, who spent most of the season rehabilitating as heavy underdogs to San Diego State his knee, rallied the Bruins this time. MVP Karch Kiraly set brilliantly and Steve Gulnac and UC Santa Barbara at Ball State. The earned All-Tournament honors. The victory avenged the previous year’s four-game loss Bruins, who received an at-large bid, were to USC in the fi nals at Ball State. routed by SDSU in round-robin play, but an upset against UCSB gave them a fi nal 1982 - AT PENN STATE match showdown against the Aztecs. SDSU Ranked No. 1 and undefeated, the Bruins entered the NCAA Tournament as heavy appeared ready for a three-game sweep, favorites. UCLA swept Ohio State in the semifi nals. The next night the Bruins downed winning the fi rst two games, 15-10, 15-9, host Penn State, 15-4, 15-9, 15-7. Kiraly became the fi rst player in collegiate volleyball and opening an 8-3 lead in Game 3. But the history to receive MVP honors two straight years, and Doug Partie, Mark Kinnison and Bruins rallied after Scates called a timeout. Dave Mochalski were All-Tournament selections. MVP Dick Irvin and All-Tournament selec- tion John Zajec sparked the comeback. 1983 - AT OHIO STATE Despite losing three of their fi rst six conference matches, the Bruins rolled to their 1974 - AT UC SANTA BARBARA second straight league title, forcing Pepperdine, which had beaten UCLA in two of three UC Santa Barbara was the heavy favorite meetings, into the grueling regionals. The Waves won the wildcard spot, setting the to win at home and easily beat the Bruins stage for another UCLA-Pepperdine battle. In the semifi nals, UCLA cruised to a three- in Games 1 and 3 in the title match. With John Zajec was a member of UCLA’s fi rst game victory over Ohio State, and the Waves obliged by beating Penn State. In the fi nal, the Gauchos ahead 6-1 in the fi fth game, three NCAA title teams and earned NCAA UCLA dominated play at the net and limited the Waves to a .099 hitting percentage. Scates inserted seldom-used freshman All-Tournament honors in 1972. The three-game sweep gave coach Al Scates his 10th NCAA title, tying him with John Sabin Perkins, who served six straight Wooden. Ricci Luyties was voted Most Outstanding Player and Wally Martin, Doug Partie points, including three aces, to reverse the momentum and give UCLA its fourth cham- and Steve Gulnac joined him on the All-Tournament Team. pionship in fi ve years. UCLA’s Bob Leonard was named MVP, and Mike Normand and Jim Menges were named to the All-Tournament squad. 1984 - AT UCLA Several milestones were achieved during this historic season. In addition to an undefeated 1975 - AT UCLA season, the Bruins’ 38 victories were an NCAA men’s volleyball record as well as a UC Santa Barbara invaded Pauley Pavilion unbeaten and with the reputation as the best school record. Scates guided UCLA to an unprecedented fourth consecutive national collegiate volleyball team in history. Before more than 8,000 fans, Scates received a championship, his 11th in the 15-year history of the sport, moving him ahead of Wooden. great fi nal match performance from MVP John Bekins and fi ne hitting and blocking The title match drew a record 9,809 spectators, and UCLA’s Ricci Luyties earned Most from All-Tournament members John Herron and Joe Mica, as well as Chris Irvin, Fred Outstanding Player honors for the second straight year. Other Bruins named to the Sturm and Denny Cline. All-Tournament Team were seniors Doug Partie and Roger Clark, plus freshman Ozzie Volstad, who would be instrumental in the Bruins’ next title season. 1976 - AT BALL STATE 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.

34 RECORDS

1987 - AT UCLA 1996 - AT UCLA The Bruins stormed into the NCAA Tournament with all the advantages: a 25-match The improbable championship proved one of the most exciting and gratifying for coach winning streak, a No. 1 seeding, two weeks of rest, the country’s best record, the home Al Scates. “This one was special because we had to work so hard for it,” said Scates, court crowd and a wealth of tradition. In typical Al Scates fashion, UCLA breezed past whose 16th title tied him with former Houston golf coach Dave Williams for the NCAA Ohio State in the semifi nals, while USC needed fi ve games to outlast a tough Penn lead. With four starters gone from the previous season, the Bruins gutted out No.16 State team. A crowd of 8,952, third largest in collegiate volleyball history, cheered as in a thrilling fi ve-game, three-hour and twenty-seven minute fi nal against Hawaii, the the Bruins swept past their arch rivals in a two-hour, three-game match, 15-11, 15-2, preseason favorite. The victory raised the Bruins’ intimidating post-season home-court 16-14. UCLA tied its school record for single season victories by fi nishing with a 38-3 record to 24-0 and improved their record, and senior All-American Ozzie Volstad capped an outstanding career by earning overall NCAA playoff record to Most Outstanding Player honors. Seniors Jeff Williams and Arne Lamberg also were 43-4. UCLA’s Stein Metzger, the named to the All-Tournament Team. AVCA co-Player of the Year, earned All-Tournament honors along with the Bruins’ Tom Stillwell, who led 1989 - AT UCLA The Bruins were hosts for the 20th annual tournament, featuring a fi nal match showdown the country in blocking average. 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 1998 - AT HAWAI’I fi rst title match. In the semifi nals, the Bruins swept Penn State, while the Cardinal got a The Bruins saved their best scare from Ball State before winning in four. In the fi nal, the Bruins jumped off to a quick for last in winning for Scates start and won Games 1 and 2, 15-1, 15-13. a record-breaking 17th title. Stanford appeared to have regrouped in Game After outlasting Lewis University 3 by stomping the Bruins 15-4, but Scates and 3-2 in the semifi nals, the fi nal MVP Matt Sonnichsen hung on to win Game against Pepperdine on a hostile 4, 15-12. Bruins named to the All-Tournament court proved to be a match of team were Trevor Schirman, who shut down veterans vs. inexperience. With Stanford Olympian Scott Fortune, and seniors fi ve of six starters boasting NCAA Anthony Curci and Matt Whitaker. championship match experience, the Bruins cruised to a 3-0 victory over the Waves, who claimed just Kevin Wong earned NCAA All-Tournament honors as 1993 - AT UCLA one starter with previous champi- a sophomore in 1993. UCLA ended a three-year championship onship experience. Scates saved drought by sweeping Ohio State in the his best game plan for the fi nal, which produced a Bruin hitting percentage of .454 and semifi nals and upstart Cal State Northridge nine aces. Adam Naeve, who spiked 23 kills on .629 hitting and added three aces and in the fi nals. The Bruins continued several fi ve blocks, was named Most Outstanding Player. Setter Brandon Taliaferro and outside championship streaks: they extended their Pauley Pavilion NCAA post-season winning hitter Fred Robins also were named to the All-Tournament Team. string to 20 consecutive matches and ran their record in home court NCAA fi nals to 14-0. Scates’ 14th NCAA title inched him closer to the national record. Senior setter Mike Sealy and sophomore quick hitter Jeff Roger Clark earned NCAA All-Tourna- Nygaard earned co-Most Outstanding Player ment honors in 1984. 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.

1995 - AT SPRINGFIELD, MA The championship returned to volleyball’s birthplace and the kingpin of the sport re- claimed its crown. Following the second-place fi nish to Penn State the previous year, UCLA’s four fi fth-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 semifi nals. Revenge also served as the major motivation against Penn State. The Bruins swept them in the fi nals 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.

John Speraw (l) and Erik Sullivan team up for this block against Penn State in the 1995 NCAA fi nals at Springfi eld, MA.

35 RECORDS

2000 - AT IPFW 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 fi rst round of the 1999 league playoffs. Senior setter Brandon Taliaferro guided UCLA to a pair of sweeps over Penn State in the semifi nals and Ohio State in the fi nals. 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 defi cit 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.

2006 - AT PENN STATE 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 quarterfi nals, 3-0 vs. Pepperdine in the league semifi nals and 3-1 vs. Long Beach State in the MPSF championship match. The Bruins buried IPFW 3-0 in the NCAA semifi nals 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 eight- point defi cit in Game 2 to win their second NCAA title at Penn State (the fi rst 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.

The Bruins celebrate their 19th Men’s Volleyball National Championship after defeating Penn State in 2006.

MOST NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS IN A SINGLE SPORT (DIV. I - AS OF JULY, 2019) 1. Oklahoma State Wrestling - 34 2. USC Men’s Outdoor Track and Field - 26 3. Denver Skiing - 24 4. Iowa Wrestling - 23 5. North Carolina Women’s Soccer - 21 Yale Men’s Golf - 21 USC Men’s Tennis - 21 8. Arkansas Men’s Indoor Track and Field - 20 Stanford women’s tennis - 20 10. UCLA Men’s Volleyball - 19 West Virginia Rifl e - 19 Colorado Skiing - 19

36 RECORDS

UCLA has appeared in 27 overall NCAA Tournaments and posted a record of 54-9 (.857). The 1994 NCAA Championship at IPFW Bruins have posted a 27-2 (.931) record in Pauley Pavilion NCAA Tournament matches and Semifi nals: UCLA d. IPFW, 15-3, 15-8, 15-4 UCLA is 19-7 (.731) overall in NCAA title matches. Championships: Penn State d. UCLA, 9-15, 15-13, 4-15, 15-12, 15-12 1970 NCAA Championship at UCLA 1995 NCAA Championship at Springfi eld, MA Round Robin Play: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-6, 15-10 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Ball State, 15-12, 15-9, 15-10 UCLA d. Ball State, 15-4, 15-6 Championship: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-3, 15-10, 15-10 UCLA d. Long Beach State, 15-12, 13-15, 15-2 Semifi nals: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-10, 15-13, 15-8 1996 NCAA Championship at UCLA Championship: UCLA d. Long Beach State, 15-7, 15-4, 15-8 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Lewis, 15-7, 15-8, 15-10 Championship: UCLA d. Hawaii, 15-13, 12-15, 9-15, 17-15, 15-12 1971 NCAA Championship at UCLA Round Robin Play: UCLA d. Springfi eld, 15-3, 15-4 1997 NCAA Championship at Ohio State UCLA d. Ball State, 15-7, 15-12 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-13, 13-15, 15-4, 10-15, 15-10 UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-11, 14-16, 15-9 Championship: Stanford d. UCLA, 15-7, 15-10, 9-15, 6-15, 15-13 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Springfi eld, 15-6, 15-1, 15-3 1998 NCAA Championship at Hawai’i Championship: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-6, 17-15, 17-15 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Lewis, 13-15, 15-9, 15-6, 13-15, 15-11 1972 NCAA Championship at Ball State Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 15-11, 15-11, 15-7 Round Robin Play: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-13, 15-7 2000 NCAA Championship at IPFW San Diego State d. UCLA, 15-7, 15-11 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Penn State, 15-11, 15-8, 15-10 UCLA d. Ball State 15-1, 15-4 Championship: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-8, 15-10, 17-15 Semifi nals: 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 2001 NCAA Championship at Long Beach State Semifi nals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 30-21, 30-20, 22-30, 30-24 1974 NCAA Championship at UC Santa Barbara Championship: BYU d. UCLA, 26-30, 26-30, 30-32 Semifi nals: 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 2005 NCAA Championship at UCLA Semifi nals: UCLA d. Penn State, 30-20, 30-24, 30-27 1975 NCAA Championship at UCLA Championship: Pepperdine d. UCLA, 30-23, 23-30, 24-30, 30-25, 15-10 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-1, 15-11, 15-8 Championship: UCLA d. UC Santa Barbara, 15-9, 7-15, 15-9, 15-10 2006 NCAA Championship at Penn State Semifi nals: UCLA d. IPFW, 30-25, 30-23, 30-28 1976 NCAA Championship at Ball State Championship: UCLA d. Penn State, 30-27, 30-27, 30-27 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Springfi eld, 15-4, 15-2, 15-5 Championship: UCLA d. Pepperdine, 18-16, 15-9, 15-11 2016 NCAA Championship at Penn State Semifi nals: Ohio State d. UCLA, 22-25, 25-22, 25-21, 20-25, 18-16 1978 NCAA Championship at Ohio State Semifi nals: UCLA d. Rutgers-Newark, 15-11, 15-8, 15-8 2018 NCAA Championship at UCLA Championship: Pepperdine d. UCLA, 15-12, 11-15, 15-8, 5-15, 15-12 Opening Round: UCLA d. Harvard, 23-25, 25-21, 25-11, 25-21 Semifi nals: UCLA d. BYU, 25-22, 24-26, 29-27, 25-19 1979 NCAA Championship at UCLA Championship: Long Beach State d. UCLA 25-19, 23-25, 20-25, 26-24, 15-12 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: 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 Semifi nals: UCLA d. Ohio State, 15-4, 15-4, 15-2 Championship: UCLA d. CSUN, 15-8, 15-11, 15-10 Ricci Luyties celebrates after one of his four NCAA Men’s Volleyball titles.

37 RECORDS

Championship Total Year Champion (Record) Head Coach Score Runner-Up Host Match Attendance Attendance 1970 UCLA (24-1) Al Scates 3-0 Long Beach St. UCLA 3,143 — 1971 UCLA (29-1) Al Scates 3-0 UCSB UCLA — — 1972 UCLA (27-7) Al Scates 3-2 San Diego St. Ball St. — — 1973 San Diego St. (21-5) Jack Henn 3-1 Long Beach St. San Diego St. 7,762 13,412 1974 UCLA (30-5) Al Scates 3-2 UCSB UCSB 3,000 4,842 1975 UCLA (27-8) Al Scates 3-1 UCSB UCLA 8,000 11,500 1976 UCLA (15-2) Al Scates 3-0 Pepperdine Ball St. 4,140 5,514 1977 USC (18-1) Ernie Hix 3-1 Ohio St. UCLA 4,500 5,152 1978 Pepperdine (21-4) Marv Dunphy 3-2 UCLA Ohio St. 4,756 7,415 1979 UCLA (31-0) Al Scates 3-1 USC UCLA 6,100 6,870 1980 USC (22-6) Ernie Hix 3-1 UCLA Ball St. 3,000 5,242 1981 UCLA (32-3) Al Scates 3-2 USC UCSB 5,000 8,946 1982 UCLA (29-0) Al Scates 3-0 Penn St. Penn St. 5,641 7,476 1983 UCLA (27-4) Al Scates 3-0 Pepperdine Ohio St. 3,638 6,580 1984 UCLA (38-0) Al Scates 3-1 Pepperdine UCLA 9,809 12,898 1985 Pepperdine (25-2) Marv Dunphy 3-1 USC UCLA 6,378 7,908 1986 Pepperdine (22-7) Rod Wilde 3-2 USC Penn St. 3,610 6,925 1987 UCLA (38-3) Al Scates 3-0 USC UCLA 8,952 11,689 1988 USC (34-4) Bob Yoder 3-2 UCSB IPFW 6,207 12,807 1989 UCLA (29-5) Al Scates 3-1 Stanford UCLA 7,244 9,436 1990 USC (26-7) Jim McLaughlin 3-1 Long Beach St. George Mason 5,511 8,347 1991 Long Beach St. (31-4) Ray Ratelle 3-1 USC Hawaii — 5,184 1992 Pepperdine (24-4) Marv Dunphy 3-0 Stanford Ball St. 7,391 13,102 1993 UCLA (24-3) Al Scates 3-0 CS Northridge UCLA 8,482 11,018 1994 Penn St. (26-3) Tom Peterson 3-2 UCLA IPFW 7,908 15,495 1995 UCLA (31-1) Al Scates 3-0 Penn St. Springfi eld 4,376 7,925 1996 UCLA (26-5) Al Scates 3-2 Hawaii UCLA 7,688 11,396 1997 Stanford (27-4) Ruben Nieves 3-2 UCLA Ohio St. 3,798 6,237 1998 UCLA (28-4) Al Scates 3-0 Pepperdine Hawaii 9,822 18,901 1999 BYU (30-1) Carl McGown 3-0 Long Beach St. UCLA 8,026 13,513 2000 UCLA (29-5) Al Scates 3-0 Ohio St. IPFW 2,738 5,031 2001 BYU (23-4) Carl McGown 3-0 UCLA Long Beach St. 4,807 9,009 2002 *Hawaii (24-8) Mike Wilton 3-1 Pepperdine Penn St. 5,357 10,614 2003 *Lewis (29-6) Dave Deuser 3-2 BYU Long Beach St. 4,317 8,157 2004 BYU (29-4) Tom Peterson 3-2 Long Beach St. Hawaii 4,105 7,812 2005 Pepperdine (25-2) Marv Dunphy 3-2 UCLA UCLA 6,853 9,800 2006 UCLA (26-12) Al Scates 3-0 Penn St. Penn St. 5,453 8,916 2007 UC Irvine (29-5) John Speraw 3-1 IPFW Ohio State 4,756 6,906 2008 Penn State (30-1) Mark Pavlik 3-1 Pepperdine UC Irvine 5,000 10,000 2009 UC Irvine (27-5) John Speraw 3-2 USC BYU 3,015 5,579 2010 Stanford (25-6) John Kosty 3-0 Penn St. Stanford 6,635 12,302 2011 Ohio State (26-6) Pete Hanson 3-2 UC Santa Barbara Penn State 3,683 9,455 2012 UC Irvine (26-5) John Speraw 3-0 USC USC 9,612 13,987 2013 UC Irvine (25-7) David Kniffi n 3-0 BYU UCLA 6,295 9,230 2014 Loyola, Chicago (29-1) Shane Davis 3-1 Stanford Loyola, Chicago 4,485 9,920 2015 Loyola, Chicago (28-2) Shane Davis 3-2 Lewis Stanford 2,419 4,104 2016 Ohio State (31-3) Pete Hanson 3-0 BYU Penn State 2,745 4,969 2017 Ohio State (32-2) Pete Hanson 3-0 BYU Ohio State 8,205 13,039 2018 Long Beach State (28-1) Alan Knipe 3-2 UCLA UCLA 7,248 13,188 2019 Long Beach State (28-2) Alan Knipe 3-1 Hawai’i Long Beach St. 3,824 7,602

The Bruins celebrate after winning the 1984 NCAA title, their fourth straight and 11th overall. UCLA was 38-0 that season.

38 UCLA’S NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP STARTERS

Year (record) Setter/Libero Quick Hitter Outside Hitter 1970 (24-1) Dane Holtzman (c) Kirk Kilgour Dick Irvin Ed Machado Ed Becker Bruce Herring

1971 (29-1) Larry Griebenow Kirk Kilgour (2) Bob Leonard Ed Machado (c) (2) Dick Irvin (2) Bruce Herring (2)

1972 (27-7) Larry Griebenow (2) John Zajec Bob Leonard (2) Jim Menges Jeff Jacobs Dick Irvin (c) (3)

1974 (30-5) John Bekins Chris Irvin Bob Leonard (c) (3) Jim Menges (2) Denny Cline Mike Normand

1975 (27-8) John Bekins (c) (2) Chris Irvin (2) Joe Mica Denny Cline (2) John Herren, Fred Sturm

1976 (15-2) Dave Olbright Doug Brooks, Doug Rabe Joe Mica, Mike Gottschall Peter Ashley Denny Cline (c) (3) Fred Sturm (2)

1979 (30-0) Karch Kiraly Rick Amon KC Keller Sinjin Smith (c) Steve Salmons Peter Ehrmen, Joe Mica (3)

1981 (32-3) Karch Kiraly (c) (2) Steve Gulnac Dave Saunders Ricci Luyties Doug Partie Rick Amon (2) Steve Salmons (2) Peter Ehrmen (2)

1982 (29-0) Karch Kiraly (c) (3) Dave Mochalski Dave Saunders (2) Ricci Luyties (2) Doug Partie (2) Mark Kinnison, Reed Sunahara

1983 (27-4) Ricci Luyties (3) Doug Partie (3) Roger Clark Wally Martin Steve Gulnac (c) (2) Reed Sunahara (2)

1984 (38-0) Ricci Luyties (c) (4) Doug Partie (4) Roger Clark (2) Wally Martin (2) Asbjorn Volstad Reed Sunahara (3) Andy Klussman

1987 (38-3) Matt Sonnichsen Don Dendinger Ozzie Volstad (c) (2), Arne Lamberg Trevor Schirman Jeff Williams

1989 (29-5) Matt Sonnichsen (2) Trevor Schirman (2) Matt Whitaker, Carl Henkel Mike Whitcomb Bill Suwara, Oren Sher, Anthony Curci (c)

1993 (24-3) Mike Sealy (c) Tim Kelly Erik Sullivan Jeff Nygaard Kevin Wong, Dan Landry, Mike Diehl

1995 (31-1) Stein Metzger John Speraw Kevin Wong (2), Paul Nihipali Jeff Nygaard (2) Erik Sullivan (c) (2)

1996 (26-5) Stein Metzger (c) (2) Tom Stillwell Fred Robins, Paul Nihipali (2) James Turner Brian Wells

1998 (28-4) Brandon Taliaferro Tom Stillwell (c) (2) Fred Robins (2), Evan Thatcher Adam Naeve Ben Moselle

2000 (29-5) Brandon Taliaferro (c) (2) Scott Morrow Evan Thatcher (2), Ed Ratledge, Mark Matt Davis, libero Seth Burnham Williams, Cameron Mount, Matt Komer

2006 (26-12) Dennis Gonzalez David Russell Paul George Matt Wade Nick Scheftic Steve Klosterman Tony Ker, libero Damien Scott (c)

**Numbers in parentheses indicate number of NCAA titles won as a starter. c—Captain. Ghost Photo: Ozzie Volstad

35 RECORDS

USVBA ALL-AMERICANS 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 1963–Jim Adomali, John Carmack, Al Scates and Steve team: Ben Moselle. Drummy 1999–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and 1964–James Calonico, Andy Schutz, Steve Burian, Tom Adam Naeve; 3rd team: Danny Farmer. AVCA 1st team: Barr and Ernie Suwara Brandon Taliaferro and Adam Naeve. 1965–Steve Burian, Keith Erickson, Phil Lingman, Bill 2000–Asics/Volleyball Player of the Year: Brandon Taliafer- Pearlman, Larry Rundle, Ernie Suwara and Andy Schutz ro; Libero of the Year: Matt Davis; 3rd team: Mark Williams, 1966–Ernie Suwara, Larry Rundle, Greg Miller and 3rd Team. AVCA 1st team: Brandon Taliaferro. Steve Eddy 2001–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Adam Naeve; 2nd team: 1967–Andy Banachowski, Greg Miller, Ernie Suwara Mark Williams; Honorable mention: Adam Shrader. AVCA and Robert Becker 1st team: Adam Naeve and Mark Williams. 1968–Mike Allio, Andy Banachowski and Mike McCann 2002–Asics/Volleyball Libero of the Yera: Adam Shrader; 1969–Kirk Kilgour, Toshi Toyoda, Dane Holtzman and 2nd team: Matt Komer; Honorable mention: Chris Peña. Bruce Herring AVCA 2nd team: Matt Komer. Keith Erickson 2004–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of NCAA ALL-AMERICANS* the Year: Adam Shrader; Honorable mention: Paul Johnson and Chris Peña. AVCA 1st team: Adam Shrader; 2nd team: 1977–Steve Suttich, Joe Mica and Doug Rabe Chris Peña. 1978–Dave Olbright, Steve Salmons, Sinjin Smith and Doug Rabe 2005–Asics/Volleyball 1st team: Paul Johnson; 2nd team: 1979–Steve Salmons, Peter Ehrman, Karch Kiraly, Rick Amon, Sinjin Smith and K.C. Keller Tony Ker. AVCA 1st team: Paul Johnson. 1980–Karch Kiraly, Steve Gulnac and Peter Ehrman 2006–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of 1981–Karch Kiraly and Steve Gulnac the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; Spike/ 1982–Karch Kiraly, Doug Partie and Dave Saunders Volleyball 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; 3rd team: Tony Ker; Honorable mention: Nick Scheftic and Paul George. 1983–1st team:Steve Gulnac, Ricci Luyties, Doug Partie and Reed Sunahara; Honorable mention:Wally 2007–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of Martin the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman. Spike/ Volleyball 1st team: Tony Ker; 3rd team: Steve Klosterman. 1984–1st team: Ricci Luyties, Doug Partie and Kyle Caldwell AVCA 1st team: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Steve Klosterman. Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Reed Sunahara 2008–Asics/Volleyball 1st team and Defensive Player of 1985–1st team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Tim the Year: Tony Ker; 2nd team: Garrett Muagututia. AVCA 1st team: Tony Ker. Otterman and Dan Vrebalovich 2009–Asics/Volleyball Honorable mention: Garrett Muagututia. 1986–2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad; Honorable men- tion:Jeff Willams and Arne Lamberg 2010–AVCA/Volleyball 2nd team: Garrett Muagututia. 1987–Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Asbjorn 2012–AVCA/Volleyball 1st team: Thomas Amberg and Kyle Caldwell; 2nd team: Weston Dunlap. Volstad; 1st team: Jeff Williams; 2nd team: Matt 2013–AVCA/Volleyball 1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Spencer Rowe and Evan Sonnichsen; 3rd team: Don Dendinger; Honorable Mottram. mention: Arne Lamberg; Freshman of the Year: Trevor 2014–AVCA 1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; Honorable mention: Spencer Rowe and Robart Page. Schirman Volleyball Magazine 3rd team: Gonzalo Quiroga. 1988–1st team: Don Dendinger; 3rd team: Matt 2015–AVCA Honorable mention: JT Hatch. Off the Block Freshman of the Year: JT Hatch. Sonnichsen; Honorable mention: Trevor Schirman 2016–AVCA 1st team: Micah Ma’a; 2nd team: Jake Arnitz and Mitch Stahl; Off the Block 1989 –Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Trevor Freshman All-America: Micah Ma’a. Schirman; 1st team: Matt Sonnichsen; 3rd team: Mike 2017–AVCA 2nd team: Jake Arnitz; Honorable mention: Mitch Stahl; Volleyballmag.com 2nd Whitcomb; Honorable Mention: Anthony Curci team: Jake Arnitz, Mitch Stahl; Off the Block Freshman All-America: Daenan Gyimah. Reed Sunahara 1990 –1st team: Trevor Schirman; 2nd team: Mike 2018–AVCA 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Jake Arnitz, JT Whitcomb Hatch and Christian Hessenauer; Volleyballmag.com 1st team: Daenan Gyimah, Micah Ma’a; 1991–1st team: Mike Sealy; 3rd team: Carl Henkel; 2nd team: Jake Arnitz; Hon. Mention: Christian Hessenauer; VolleyMob 1st team: Daenan Honorable mention: Mike Whitcomb; Freshman team: David Swatik. Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Christian Hessenauer. 1992–Asics/Volleyball Monthly 2nd team: Dan Landry; 3rd team: Mike Sealy, Freshman of the 2019–AVCA 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; Volleyballmag.com 1st team: Daenan Year: Jeff Nygaard; All-Freshman team: Erik Sullivan; AVCA 2nd team: Dan Landry. Gyimah, Micah Ma’a; Honorable mention: Dylan Missry, Cole Pender. 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. *Collegiate All-America honors awarded by Volleyball Magazine, Volleyball News, Volleyball 1994–Asics/Volleyball Monthly Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Erik Sullivan; 3rd Monthly, Volleyball, Spike/Volleyball, Off the Block, VolleyMob or the American Volleyball Coaches team: Kevin Wong; Honorable mention: Paul Nihipali; All-Freshman Team: Paul Nihipali. AVCA Assn. (AVCA). 1992 was the fi rst year the AVCA recognized All-Americans for men’s volleyball. 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.

40 RECORDS

NCAA ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM SELECTIONS 1992–2nd team: Dan Landry and Mike Sealy; 3rd team: Jeff Nygaard, Freshman of the Year: Jeff 1970–Dane Holtzman*, Ed Becker and Kirk Kilgour Nygaard; All-Freshman Team: Erik Sullivan. 1971–Kirk Kilgour†, Larry Griebenow and Ed Machado 1993–1st team: Jeff Nygaard and Mike Sealy; 1972–Dick Irvin* and John Zajec Honorable mention: Kevin Wong. 1974–Bob Leonard*, Jim Menges and Mike Normand 1994–Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 1st Team: 1975–John Bekins*, John Herren and Joe Mica Jeff Nygaard; 2nd team: Erik Sullivan; 3rd team: 1976–Joe Mica*, Denny Cline, Dave Olbright and Kevin Wong and Paul Nihipali; Honorable mention: Fred Sturm Tim Kelly and Stein Metzger. 1978–Dave Olbright, Steve Salmons and Sinjin Smith 1995–Player of the Year: Jeff Nygaard; 1st team: 1979–Sinjin Smith*, Peter Ehrman, Joe Mica and Jeff Nygaard and Paul Nihipali; 2nd team: Stein Steve Salmons Metzger; 3rd team: Erik Sullivan. 1980–Steve Gulnac and Karch Kiraly 1996–Player of the Year: Stein Metzger; 1st 1981–Karch Kiraly*, Steve Salmons and Steve Gulnac team:Paul Nihipali; Honorable mention: Tom Stillwell. 1982–Karch Kiraly*, Dave Saunders, Doug Partie and 1997–1st team: Paul Nihipali and Tom Stillwell; 3rd Dave Mochalski team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Taliaferro; Fresh- 1983–Ricci Luyties*, Wally Martin, Doug Partie and man of the Year: Brandon Taliaferro. Steve Gulnac 1998–1st team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Tali- 1984–Ricci Luyties*, Doug Partie, Roger Clark and aferro; 2nd team: Ben Moselle; 3rd team: Tom Asbjorn Volstad Stillwell. 1987–Asbjorn Volstad*, Arne Lamberg and Jeff Williams 1999–1st team: Adam Naeve and Brandon Tali- Danny Farmer 1989–Matt Sonnichsen*, Anthony Curci, Trevor aferro; 2nd team: Danny Farmer; 3rd team: Mark Schirman and Matt Whitaker Williams; Honorable mention: Fred Robins. Stein Metzger 1993–Jeff Nygaard† and Mike Sealy†, Kevin Wong 2000–1st team: Brandon Taliaferro and Matt Davis and Dan Landry (Libero); 3rd team: Mark Williams and Scott Morrow. 1994–Jeff Nygaard, Erik Sullivan and Paul Nihipali 2001–2nd team: Adam Naeve, Mark Williams and Adam Shrader (Libero); Honorable men- 1995–Jeff Nygaard*, Stein Metzger and John Speraw tion: Scott Morrow and Rich Nelson. 1996–Stein Metzger and Tom Stillwell 2002–1st team: Adam Shrader (Libero); 2nd team: Matt Komer; 3rd team: Cameron Mount, 1997–Paul Nihipali and Adam Naeve Rich Nelson; Honorable mention: Chris Peña and Scott Morrow. 1998–Adam Naeve*, Brandon Taliaferro and Fred Robins 2003–3rd team: Adam Shrader (Libero) and Chris Peña; Honorable mention: Jonathan Acosta and Rich Nelson. 2000–Brandon Taliaferro*, Seth Burnham and Evan Thatcher 2001–Adam Naeve and Scott Morrow 2004–1st team: Adam Shrader (Libero); 2nd team: Chris Peña; 3rd team: Paul Johnson; Honorable mention: Dennis Gonzalez, Steve Klosterman and Kris Kraushaar. 2005–Paul Johnson and Jonathan Acosta 2005–1st team: Paul Johnson and Tony Ker (Libero); Honorable mention: Kris Kraushaar 2006–Steve Klosterman*, Damien Scott and Dennis Gonzalez and Allan Vince. 2016–Jake Arnitz 2006–3rd team: Tony Ker (Libero); Honorable mention: Steve Klosterman. 2018–Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a 2007–1st team: Tony Ker (Libero); 2nd team: Steve Klosterman; 3rd team: Paul George. *Most Outstanding Player. †Co-Most Outstanding Player. 2008–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia; 3rd team:Tony Ker (Libero); Honorable mention: Jamie ALL-CONFERENCE SELECTIONS, 1975-PRESENT Diefenbach, Sean O’Malley, and D.J. Stromath. 1975–1st team: John Bekins; 2nd team: John Herren and Joe Mica. 2009–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia; Honorable mention: Thomas Amberg. 1976–1st team: Joe Mica, Dave Olbright and Fred Sturm; 2nd team: Denny Cline; 3rd team: 2010–2nd team: Garrett Muagututia. Peter Ashley. 2011–2nd team: Weston Dunlap and Gonzalo Quiroga; Honorable mention: Thomas Amberg. 1977–1st team: Joe Mica and Steve Suttich; 2nd team: Dave Olbright and Doug Rabe; 2012–1st team: Thomas Amberg, Kyle Caldwell and Weston Dunlap; 2nd team: Gonzalo Honorable mention: Sinjin Smith. Quiroga; Honorable mention: Evan Mottram (Libero). 1978–1st team: Dave Olbright* and Steve Salmons; 2nd team: Sinjin Smith and Doug Rabe; 2013–1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Dane Worley and Spencer Rowe; Honorable Honorable mention: Peter Ehrman. mention: Evan Mottram (Libero) and Robart Page. 1979–1st team: Steve Salmons* and Sinjin Smith; 2nd team: Rick Amon; 2nd team: Peter 2014–1st team: Gonzalo Quiroga; 2nd team: Spencer Rowe and Robart Page; All-Freshman Ehrman and Karch Kiraly. team: Jackson Bantle (Libero) and Mitch Stahl. 1980–1st team: Karch Kiraly*, Peter Ehrman and Steve Gulnac; Honorable mention: Dave 2015–2nd team: JTHatch; Honorable mention: Mitch Stahl and Trent Kersten; Freshman of the Saunders and Randy Stoklos. Year: JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Jake Arnitz. 1981–1st team: Karch Kiraly* and Steve Gulnac; 2nd team: Dave Saunders and Rick Amon; 2016–1st team: Micah Ma’a and Jake Arnitz; 2nd team: Mitch Stahl; Honorable mention: Ha- Honorable mention: Peter Ehrman. gen Smith and JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Micah Ma’a. 1982–1st team: Karch Kiraly*, Dave Saunders*, Doug Partie* and Ricci Luyties; 2nd team: 2017–1st team: Mitch Stahl and Jake Arnitz; Honorable mention: Micah Ma’a, Daenan Gyimah, Dave Mochalski. and JT Hatch; All-Freshman team: Daenan Gyiman. 1983–1st team: Ricci Luyties and Doug Partie; 2nd team: Steve Gulnac and Reed Sunaha- 2018– 1st team: Jake Arnitz, Daenan Gyimah, Micah Ma’a and Christian Hessenauer; 2nd ra; Honorable mention: Roger Clark. team: JT Hatch and Dylan Missry; Honorable mention: Oliver Martin. 1984–1st team: Ricci Luyties; 2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad. 2019– 1st team: Daenan Gyimah and Micah Ma’a; All-Freshman team: Cole Pender and Adam Parks. 1985–1st team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Tim Otterman and Dan Vrebalovich. 1986–2nd team: Asbjorn Volstad; 3rd team: Jeff Williams; Honorable mention: Arne Lamberg. *Unanimous selections. †Player of the Year. HM–Honorable Mention. 1987–Player of the Year: Asbjorn Volstad; 1st Team: Asbjorn Volstad; 2nd team: Arne Lam- berg, Matt Sonnichsen and Jeff Williams; 3rd team: Don Dendinger. 1988–1st team: Don Dendinger; 2nd team: Matt Sonnichsen; Honorable 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.

41 RECORDS

UCLA’S NATIONAL PLAYERS OF THE YEAR

Ricci Luyties, 1983 &’84 Ozzie Volstad, 1987 Trevor Schirman, 1989 Michael Sealy, 1993 Jeff Nygaard, 1994 & ‘95 Stein Metzger, 1996 Brandon Taliaferro, 2000

MVB NATIONAL PLAYERS OF THE YEAR* BRUIN ACADEMIC ALL-STARS U.S. NATIONAL TEAM BRUINS 1955-56, 59 -- Art Alper 1983 Ricci Luyties, UCLA Ed Machado, 1970-71* Rolf Engen 1984 Ricci Luyties, UCLA Karch Kiraly, 1981-82* 1959, 63-64 -- Mike O’Hara 1985 Bob Ctvrtlik, Pepperdine Asbjorn Volstad, 1986-87* 1959, 63-64 1964 -- Keith Erickson 1986 Adam Johnson, USC Trong Nguyen, 1996-97*# 1964-65 -- Ernie Suwara 1987 Ozzie Volstad, UCLA Ed Ratledge, 1999-2000# 1965-67 -- Al Scates 1988 Tom Duke, USC Danny Farmer, 1999-2000* 1966-69, 71 -- Larry Rundle 1989 Trevor Schirman, UCLA Scott Morrow, 2002-03†^ 1969 -- Mike Allio 1990 Bryan Ivie, USC Adam Shrader, 2002-04^ 1970-75 -- Kirk Kilgour 1991 Bryan Ivie, USC J.T. Wenger, 2004^ 1972 -- Ed Machado 1992 Brent Hilliard, LBS Jonathan Acosta, 2005^ 1973-77 -- Joe Mica 1993 Michael Sealy, UCLA David Russell, 2006^ 1975 -- John Zajec 1994 Jeff Nygaard, UCLA Eric Chaghouri, 2006-07^ 1976 -- Denny Cline 1995 Jeff Nygaard, UCLA Jamie Diefenbach, 2006-08^ 1976-80 -- Dave Olbright 1996 Stein Metzger, UCLA Tony Ker, 2006-08^ 1979, 1981-86 -- Steve Salmons and Yuval Katz, Hawaii Ryan Ratelle, 2008-09^ 1979-80 -- Sinjin Smith 1997 Ivan Contreras, Penn State Sean O’Malley, 2009 1981-89 -- Karch Kiraly 1998 , Pepperdine Jack Polales, 2009-10^ 1982 -- Rick Amon Micah Ma’a, 2019 1999 Ryan Millar, BYU Thomas Amberg, 2010-12^ 1983 -- Greg Giovanazzi 2000 Brandon Taliaferro, UCLA Dylan Bowermaster, 2010^ Steve Gulnac 2001 Costas Theocharidis, Hawaii Kevin Ker, 2010^ 1983-88 -- Dave Saunders 2002 Brad Keenan, Pepperdine Jeremy Casebeer, 2011-12^ 1984 -- Matt Whitaker 2003 Not Awarded Evan Mottram, 2011-13^ 1985 -- Wally Martin 2004 Carlos Moreno, BYU Spencer Rowe, 2011-14#^ 1985-88 -- Ricci Luyties 2005 Sean Rooney, Pepperdine Gonzalo Quiroga, 2014^ 1985-88, 91-92 -- Doug Partie 1988 -- Arne Lamberg 2006 Jayson Jablonsky, UCI Jackson Bantle, 2015-17^ 1989 -- Don Dendinger 2007 Jonathan Winder, Pepperdine Michael Fisher, 2015-17^ 1989 -- Jeff Williams 2008 Jonathan Winder, Pepperdine and Mitch Stahl, 2015-17^ 1989-90 -- Matt Sonnichsen Matt Anderson, Penn St. Hagen Smith, 2016-17^ 2009 Paul Carroll, Pepperdine 1990-92 -- Trevor Schirman Micah Ma’a 2017-18-19^ 1990-96 -- Fred Sturm, coach 2010 Kawika Shoji, Stanford Dylan Missry, 2017-18-19^ 1993-01 -- Dan Landry 2011 Murphy Troy, USC Grant Maleski 2019^ 1993-01, 2006-07 -- Jeff Nygaard 2012 Tony Ciarelli, USC *NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship winners. #CoSIDA Aca- 1994, ‘97 -- Mike Sealy 2013 Taylor Crabb, LBSU 1995-99 -- Tom Stillwell 2014 Taylor Sander, BYU demic All-Americans. ^All-MPSF Academic Team. †Pac-10 Postgraduate Scholarship. 1997-2005 -- Erik Sullivan 2015 Thomas Jaeschke, Loyola-Chi. 1999-2005 -- Adam Naeve Mitch Stahl, 2019 2016 Nicolas Szerszen, Ohio State 2000-03, 2006-08 -- Brandon Taliaferro 2017 TJ DeFalco, Long Beach State 2005-08 -- Allan Vince 2018 TJ DeFalco & Josh Tuaniga, Long Beach St. 2006 -- Gray Garrett 2019 TJ DeFalco, Long Beach St. Matt Komer *Named by Volleyball Monthly and Volleyball Magazine which merged in 1995. Kris Kraushaar Matt McKinney Damien Scott 2006, ‘08 -- Nick Scheftic 2008 -- Tony Ker Steve Klosterman 2010-14, 2017-19 -- Garrett Muagututia 2012, 2014 -- Nick Vogel 2013 -- Kyle Caldwell 2019 - Micah Ma’a Mitch Stahl

Garrett Muagututia, 2010-14, 2017-19

42 RECORDS

#20 • DOUG PARTIE: QH 6-6 Santa Barbara, Calif. • Dos Pueblos HS #45 • DENNY CLINE: MB 6-3 Newport Beach, Calif. • Newport Harbor HS Doug Partie played alongside Ricci Luyties and formed an unbeatable combination. Denny Cline (#45) lettered at UCLA from 1974-76 and was, in Al Scates’ words, “a The Bruins won 126 of 133 matches with each of his four seasons resulting player who got more production out of less talent than any I’ve ever coached.” in an NCAA title. Partie controlled the net as one of collegiate volleyball’s After being cut as a freshman, Cline fought his way into the lineup and the most feared blockers—the Bruins established blocking records Bruins won three straight NCAA titles. Cline earned NCAA All-Tournament during his tenure that still stand. He was a honors as a senior captain in 1976. He went on to play for the U.S. National three-time all-conference and All-America Team that year and graduated from UCLA in 1977 with a 3.6 grade point selection. On the U.S. National Team, he average in Political Science. During the 1977 season, he served as a won a gold medal in 1988 and a bronze in graduate assistant coach, and in 1978 Scates elevated him to full-time 1992. He played professionally in the prestigious status. Cline served two stints and eight seasons as an assistant coach. Italian League for two seasons and earned league As a player and assistant coach, he was involved in seven of the Bruins’ all-star recognition. On the four-man pro beach circuit he fi rst 11 NCAA titles. He coached all three of UCLA’s undefeated teams, earned league all-star honors, and in 1995 led Team Sideout played on the Bruins’ second three-peat championship run (1974-76), to the regular season championship for which he won MVP and coached three-straight national championship teams (1982-84). honors. Partie’s son Kendall also played volleyball at UCLA.

#22 • SINJIN SMITH: S 6-3 Santa Monica, Calif. • Loyola HS #29 • STEVE SALMONS: H/MB 6-4 Pacifi c Palisades, Calif. • Palisades HS Sinjin Smith began his UCLA career in 1976 with an NCAA title and fi nished it by Steve Salmons was a three-time All-American, who was selected the Player of the leading the Bruins to their fi rst undefeated season in 1979, for which Year in 1978. In 1979, he played on the fi rst undefeated he was named the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding volleyball team in NCAA history alongside fellow Hall of Player. Smith was a three-time all-conference player, two- Famer Sinjin Smith. In 1981, after rehabilitating an injury time All-American and led the Bruins to a record of 85-9. during the regular season, he earned NCAA All-Tournament Smith earned a spot on the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team, but honors and led the Bruins to their eighth NCAA title. After did not compete when the United States boycotted. He leaving UCLA, he played for the U.S. National Team with then dedicated the rest of his athletic career to beach Karch Kiraly until 1986 and helped lead the United States volleyball, where he ruled the sand with partner Randy to the triple crown of international volleyball — the Olympic Stoklos for more than a decade. The pair won a record 114 gold medal in 1984, the World Cup Championship in 1985, open beach tournaments together, more than $1.6 million and the World Championship title in 1986. As a professional and was responsible for the tremendous popularity of the beach player, he was a member of the team that won the 1993 Japan Open. His teams sport. In 1996 at age 39, Smith and former Bruin Carl Henkel also won 12 tournaments on the Budweiser 4-Man Tour from 1993-97. He earned qualifi ed for the Olympic beach competition and advanced to all-league and Best Middle Blocker honors in 1994. Salmons was inducted into the the semifi nals before losing in an epic battle to eventual gold Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in May of 2018. His son, Reece, medalists Karch Kiraly and Kent Steffes. In August 2001, Smith joined the men’s volleyball team at UCLA for the 2017 season. retired from the game at the Manhattan Open, a tournament he had won fi ve times. Today, he serves as an ambassador for the game and administrator for the FIVB. Smith’s oldest son Hagen played on the UCLA team from 2014-17.

#43 • LARRY RUNDLE: 6-1 Detroit, Mich. • Santa Monica HS #11 • RICCI LUYTIES: S 6-5 Pacifi c Palisades, Calif. • Palisades HS #54 • ERNIE SUWARA: 6-2 New York, N. Y. • Ricci Luyties played for the Bruins from 1981-84 and fi nished every season Larry Rundle and Ernie Suwara were All-Americans together with a national championship ring. During two of those seasons, 1982 and on some of the great UCLA teams of the 1960s before vol- 1984, the Bruins went undefeated. They also won 83 straight home matches leyball became an NCAA sport. Suwara was an Olympian during his career, compiled a record of 126-7 and won three- straight league in 1964 before playing at UCLA from 1965-67, and Rundle titles. Individually, Luyties earned All-America honors twice, all-conference served as captain of the U.S. Olympic Team in 1968 after honors three times, and was selected Volleyball Magazine’s Player of his success with the Bruins from 1965-66. Rundle, who the Year and the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player played for a pair of UCLA conference championship teams, two straight years. He is the only player to receive both of the also played on the U.S. Pan American and World Games aforementioned awards two straight seasons. As a member of teams and was a fi ve-time MVP in the USVBA national the U.S. National Team, he played on the 1988 team that won championshps from 1966-72. Suwara served as a gold medal in Seoul. On the pro beach circuit, Luyties won captain of the Bruins in 1967, played for three league seven tournaments, including the 1991 U.S. Championships at championship teams and the Bruins were 72-8 during his college Hermosa Beach. Currently, he is the head women’s volleyball career. On the sand, Rundle won 13 beach tournaments and coach at UC San Diego. Suwara won two. Both players were inducted into the Southern California Indoor Volleyball Hall of Fame in May of 2018.

43 RECORDS

#13 • KIRK KILGOUR: QH 6-5 Manhattan Beach, Calif. • Mira Costa HS • MIKE O’HARA: QH 6-4 Santa Monica, Calif. • Santa Monica HS Kirk Kilgour was the fi rst volleyball player inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Mike O’Hara, an outstanding outside hitter, was a Fame as a charter member in 1984. As a player, Kilgour enjoyed the distinction of UCLA pioneer in the sport and was instrumental in playing on Al Scates’ fi rst two NCAA championship teams. A three-time making volleyball a varsity sport at UCLA. In 1953, with All-American (USVBA and NCAA), Kilgour’s record was 80-5, including a Athletic Director Wilbur Johns’ permission, O’Hara’s record of 29-1 in 1971 when he was selected as the NCAA Tournament’s championship fraternity volleyball team represented co-Most Outstanding Player. After college, he played for several years UCLA and won the National Collegiate Championship on the U.S. National Team and in the Italian professional league before in Omaha, Nebraska. The following year, Johns ele- a tragic accident in 1976 ended his volleyball career. Kilgour’s accident vated men’s volleyball to varsity status and the Bruins did not diminish his enthusiasm for the game. He was an assistant once again captured the national championship. In coach at Pepperdine when the Waves won the NCAA title in 1985 and both seasons, O’Hara received All-America honors. served as head coach from 1979-82. He also worked as a volleyball After graduating from UCLA, O’Hara played on the USA broadcaster for all the major networks, working several Olympiads. National Team in 1959, ‘63 and ‘64. He was a member In 1977, Dr. Paul Berns and Al Scates organized the Kilgour Cup in of the 1959 gold medal team at the Pan Am Games his honor, and the benefi t match continued for 35 years. Kilgour died and a member of the 1964 Olympic team. O’Hara July 10, 2002 but his legacy continues in a book — Lucky Break — also competed in U.S. Volleyball Association national written by his former fi ancee, Belinda Begley. He was inducted into the SoCal Indoor tournaments and was named USVBA MVP in 1961 and ‘63. O’Hara and teammate Mike Volleyball Hall of Fame in the Class of 2019. Bright dominated beach tournaments in the 1960s, winning the fi rst fi ve Manhattan Beach Opens. O’Hara was elected to the USA Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1992 and the #24 • ASBJORN VOLSTAD: QH 6-4 Forde, Norway • Beach Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1996. Additionally, O’Hara was Vice-President of the Recruited entirely from a videotape, Asbjorn (Ozzie) Volstad became L.A. Olympic Organizing Committee for the 1984 Olympics, and helped negotiate the one of the greatest volleyball players in UCLA history. He arrived on location of the Olympic Organizing Committee headquarters, later known as the Peter campus from Forde, Norway and quickly earned a starting spot on V. Ueberroth building on campus. 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 #5 • STEIN METZGER: S 6-4 Honolulu, Hawai’i. • Punahou School titles. In 1987, his senior season, he swept player of the year honors Stein Metzger was a standout setter for the Bruins from 1993-96. During his career, for Volleyball Magazine, the conference, and the NCAA Tournament as UCLA captured four conference titles and three the Bruins boasted an overall record of 38-3, 18-0 in conference play. NCAA crowns (93-95-96). Metzger started on two He also held the UCLA career records for digs (746), kills (1,237) and of those national championship teams and earned blocks (337) for several years. Until the Libero position was created, he NCAA All-Tournament honors twice. Metzger ranks held the single season digs record of 308 set in 1986. A standout in second on the UCLA all-time list in set assists with the classroom, Volstad earned Academic All-America honors twice and was awarded 5,158, and owns two of the top fi ve UCLA single an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship for the 1986-87 year. season marks in set assists. He was named fi rst- team all-conference in 1996 and an AVCA 1st Team #31 • KARCH KIRALY: S 6-3 Santa Barbara, Calif. • Santa Barbara HS All-American in 1995 and 1996. In 1996, he Considered America’s greatest volleyball player, Karch Kiraly has earned nearly every was also honored as conference Player-of-the-Year award imaginable in his sport. In addition to being inducted into the UCLA Athletics and the AVCA National co-Player of the Year. Metzger Hall of Fame in 1993, he also was inducted into the Volleyball was one of the most colorful and popular players on Hall of Fame in Springfi eld, MA, on Oct. 19, 2001. In Dec. the AVP circuit. He paired with Jake Gibb to form 2000, he was voted Male Volleyball Player of the Century the 2005 AVP Team of the Year while capturing four by the FIVB. In 2005, he was inducted into the AVCA Hall of event titles, leading the Tour in digs (950), ranking second in hitting percentage (.452) Fame and in January, 2006, he was voted the most infl uential and third in kills (1,314). During his beach career, he captured a total of 18 titles (16 person in the sport’s fi rst 100 years. In 1984 and ’88, he led domestic, 2 international), won bronze at the 2001 Goodwill Games and silver at the the U.S. Olympic Team to a pair of volleyball gold medals and 2003 FIVB World Championships. Metzger was also a 2004 Olympian in Beach Volleyball kept the team atop the world rankings for several years with where he and partner Dax Holdren fi nished fi fth. Metzger is currently serving as UCLA’s victories in the World Cup, World Championships, and USA beach volleyball coach and led his squad to the 2018 and 2019 NCAA Championships. 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 competi- tion in Atlanta. His 148 career open beach victories and his career winnings of more than $3 million rank fi rst 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. Both of Kiraly’s sons are UCLA graduates.

44 RECORDS

#15 • DANNY FARMER: QH 6-4 Los Angeles, Calif. • Loyola HS #10 • PAUL NIHIPALI: OPP 6-7 Yorba Linda, Calif. • Esperanza HS A two-sport star, Danny Farmer excelled on both the Paul Nihipali, a four-time All-American was inducted gridiron and the volleyball court and was inducted in the in the Class of 2015 after fi nishing his career as Class of 2015. He started his career as a walk-on on the UCLA volleyball’s all-time kills leader with 2,096 and scout team for football and fi nished as UCLA’s all-time is still the only Bruin ever to surpass 2,000 career leader in receiving yards with 3,020. Farmer became kills. He also holds school records for most kills in a the fi rst freshman in school history to lead the team in single match (52) and in a season (650 in 1997), as receptions, and he earned honorable mention All-Pac-10 well as career kills per game (5.40). Nihipali helped honors as a sophomore in 1997. During his junior year lead UCLA to back-to-back NCAA Championships in in 1998, he earned fi rst-team All-Pac-10 acclaim after 1995 and 1996 and to runner-up fi nishes in 1994 setting a school record with 1,274 receiving yards and and 1997. He was named to the All-Tournament averaging 106.2 yards per game. During his senior team at the NCAA Championships from 1995-97 season, he was named a preseason All-American and and earned fi rst-team All-MPSF honors three times a UCLA team captain and won the Red Sanders Award and fi rst-team All-America acclaim in 1996 and as the team’s Offensive MVP. He also earned a NCAA 1997. Nihipali went on to play for the U.S. National Postgraduate Scholarship and won the Pac-10 Confer- Team from 1995-97 before embarking on a fi lm ence Medal. Farmer was drafted in the fourth round of the 2000 NFL Draft and played career. He wrote, produced and directed a feature fi lm, Beach Kings, and is currently three seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals. Farmer was just as prodigious in volleyball, producing a reality television show. 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 semifi nal victory, coming #3 • BRANDON TALIAFERRO: S 6-5 San Clemente, Calif. • San Clemente HS off the bench to ignite a 19-point rally that turned the match around and fi nishing with One of the best setters in collegiate volleyball history, a season-high 26 kills and four blocks. During his senior season, he was amongst the Brandon Taliaferro led UCLA to NCAA Championships nation’s leaders in attack percentage, hitting .444. Farmer joins his father George, a in 1998 and 2000 and fi nished his career as the 2000 inductee, in the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame. Bruins’ all-time leader in set assists with 6,840. Taliaferro also owns school records for single-season #9 • JEFF NYGAARD: QH 6-8 Madison, Wisc. • LaFollette HS (1,848 in 1998) and single-match (110 in 1998) set Jeff Nygaard starred at UCLA for four seasons (1992-95). assists and ranks No. 3 in career aces (176), No. 3 in He made an immediate impact in Westwood and was named career digs (831) and No. 10 in total blocks (396). He both conference and NCAA Freshman of the Year in 1992. began his Bruin career by winning MPSF Freshman Nygaard helped the Bruins to the 1993 NCAA title, setting of the Year honors in 1997 and fi nished it as a three- a championship record by hitting .867 against Ohio State time fi rst-team All-American and All-MPSF honoree in the semifi nals. He was named the 1993 NCAA Cham- and the 2000 NCAA Championship Most Outstanding pionship’s co-Most Outstanding Player (with current UCLA Player. Taliaferro went on to play for the U.S. National women’s coach Mike Sealy). In 1994, he set UCLA records Team from 2000-03 and 2006-08 and was named with 650 kills while averaging 6.98 kills per game. The to the Pac-12 Men’s Volleyball All-Century Team. 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 #18 • ADAM NAEVE: QH 6-10 Westchester, Calif. • Mira Costa HS league record and was named Most Outstanding Player in Adam Naeve played quick hitter for the Bruins in the NCAA Tournament. For three straight seasons (1993-95), Nygaard received all-con- the 1997, 1998, 1999 and 2001 seasons. He ference and fi rst-team All-America honors as well as being honored as the consensus was named Most Outstanding Player at the 1998 National Player of the Year in 1994 and 1995. For his career, Nygaard ranks in the Top NCAA Championship Tournament after producing 10 in kills (1,800), blocks (658), aces (123), digs (571), blocking average (1.88), kills 23 kills on a .629 hitting percentage while leading per game (5.14) and kill percentage (.427). Nygaard also played on the U.S. National UCLA to the national title. Naeve was a fi rst-team Team from 1993-2000 and has represented the United States in three Olympiads. In All-America selection in 1998, 1999 and 2001 and 2001, he joined the AVP, won a total of six events in his career, was named the 2003 a second-team choice in 1997. He earned NCAA AVP Most Valuable Player and AVP Team of the Year with partner Dain Blanton. Nygaard All-Tournament honors in 1997, 1998 and 2001. is currently the head men’s volleyball coach at USC. A fi rst-team all-conference selection in 1998, 1999 UCLA’s SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of Famers and 2001, he played with the U.S. National team 2019 - Kirk Kilgour, Dave Saunders, Rudy Suwara from 1999-2005. Naeve still ranks among school’s 2018 - Larry Rundle, Steve Salmons, John Speraw, Ernie Suwara top 5 all-time in kills, blocks, aces and kills per 2017 - Andy Banachowski, Rolf Engen, Karch Kirialy, Ricci Luyties, Mike O’Hara, Doug Partie, Al Scates, game average. Sinjin Smith UCLA’s International Volleyball Hall of Famers 2008 - Randy Stoklos 1993 - Al Scates 2003 - Sinjin Smith 1992 - Ron Von Hagen 2001 - Karch Kiraly 1991 - Rolf Engen 1997 - Andy Banachowski 1989 - Mike O’Hara 1994 - Larryy Rundle

45 RECORDS

AL SCATES’ CAREER COACHING RECORD #50 • AL SCATES: OH/COACH • Santa Monica, Calif. • Westchester HS Conf. National Considered one of the greatest collegiate Year Record Finish Finish* coaches in history, Al Scates was the archi- 1963 26-3 2nd Second, USVBA tect of a men’s volleyball program that won 1964 23-4 1st Second, USVBA USA Volleyball Collegiate Championships 1965 24-2 1st USVBA Champions in 1965 and 1967 and helped volleyball 1966 25-3 1st Second, USVBA become an NCAA Championship sport in 1967 23-3 1st USVBA Champions 1970. Scates won 19 NCAA champion- 1968 24-5 2nd Fourth, USVBA ships, 24 conference titles, produced three 1969 27-3 2nd Second, USVBA undefeated seasons and won more than 1970 24-1 1st NCAA Champions 1971 29-1 2nd NCAA Champions 1,200 matches in 50 seasons at UCLA. 1972 27-7 2nd NCAA Champions Eighty of his players earned All-America 1973 21-8 4th Regional Runner-up honors, 44 played on the U.S. National 1974 30-5 3rd NCAA Champions Team, 27 participated in the Olympic 1975 27-8 4th NCAA Champions Games and seven were named collegiate 1976 15-2 1st NCAA Champions Players of the Year at least once. In half 1977 19-4 2nd Regional Runner-up a century, Scates compiled a coaching 1978 21-3 1st NCAA Runner-up record of 1,239-290 (.812), one of the 1979 31-0 1st NCAA Champions best percentages in NCAA history. 1980 32-2 1st NCAA Runner-up 1981 32-3 2nd NCAA Champions Scates won 19 NCAA titles in 37 years 1982 29-0 1st NCAA Champions ---- 1970-71-72-74-75-76-79-81-82- 1983 27-4 1st NCAA Champions 83-84-87-89-93-95-96-98-2000 and 1984 38-0 1st NCAA Champions 2006. He was the only coach to lead a team 1985 32-8 3rd Regional Runner-up to three successive titles three times, including four straight from 1981-84. 1986 30-9 2nd Regional Runner-up Scates was named Coach of the Year six times (1984-87-93-96-98-2006). 1987 38-3 1st NCAA Champions 1988 28-10 4th First Round, Regionals Scates was the fi rst active coach to be inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall 1989 29-5 1st, tie NCAA Champions of Fame (2003). He was also enshrined in the SoCal Indoor Volleyball Hall of 1990 23-5 1st Regional Runner-up Fame (2017), the CIF Los Angeles City Hall of Fame (2013), the AVCA Hall 1991 16-9 1st Regional Runner-up of Fame (2004), the California Beach Volleyball Hall of Fame (1998) and the 1992 17-7 2nd Regional Runner-up fi rst active coach to be inducted into the International Volleyball Hall of Fame 1993 24-3 1st NCAA Champions (1993). In addition, he was also given the 2003 UCLA Alumni Assn. Award 1994 27-2 1st NCAA Runner-up for Professional Achievement. In 2012, he was presented with the Southern 1995 31-1 1st NCAA Champions 1996 26-5 1st NCAA Champions California Sports Broadcasters Gil Stratton Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1997 24-5 1st NCAA Runner-up 2002, Al was named USA Volleyball Men’s All-Era Coach and in 2018 was 1998 28-4 1st NCAA Champions recognized as the Pac-12 Volleyball Coach of the Century. 1999 20-7 3rd First Round, Regionals When he retired, UCLA held 27 NCAA men’s volleyball team and individual 2000 29-5 1st NCAA Champions records, including consecutive victories (48), consecutive home court victories 2001 24-8 1st NCAA Runner-up (83), consecutive NCAA Tournament victories (15) and most undefeated sea- 2002* 25-7 T-2nd (T-5th) First Round Regionals 2003* 15-14 9th (N/A) dnq sons (3). No other program claims an undefeated season. Finally, he guided the 2004* 24-6 3rd (2nd) Regional Semifi nals Bruins to a record of 25-0 in NCAA semifi nals and 19-6 in NCAA Championship 2005* 26-6 2nd (T-5th) NCAA Runner-up matches. His NCAA Tournament match record in Pauley Pavilion is 25-1. 2006* 26-12 7th (1st) NCAA Champions Many of Scates’ former players have become successful coaches. John 2007* 19-11 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals Speraw (UCLA ‘95), who succeeded him in 2012, won three NCAA titles at 2008* 17-14 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals UC Irvine in a decade as the Anteaters’ head coach and led the U.S. Men’s 2009* 14-16 8th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals 2010* 16-14 7th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals National Team to the bronze medal in the Rio Olympic Games. Karch Kiraly 2011* 16-15 8th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals (UCLA ‘83), the all-time leader in beach doubles victories with 149, helped 2012* 22-8 5th (T-5th) First Round, Regionals guide the U.S. Women’s National Team to a pair of silver medals as an assistant Totals 1,239-290 23 Titles, 19 NCAA Titles, coach before being promoted to head coach following the 2012 London Olym- (.812) 1 shared 2 USVBA titles pics. 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 NCAA Record: 1,051-253 (.805) career. Michael Sealy (UCLA ‘93) guided the UCLA women’s team to an NCAA *MPSF Tournament fi nish listed in parentheses. Championship in 2011. Stein Metzger (UCLA ‘96) led UCLA to its fi rst NCAA UCLA also won USVBA Collegiate Championships in 1953, ’54 and ’56. 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 fi rst all-time with 114 beach doubles victories with partner Randy Stoklos, also a former UCLA letterman. Smith won six 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.

46 RECORDS

The 1988 gold-medal winning U.S. Olympic Team featured four UCLA greats (l-r): Doug Partie, Dave Saunders, Karch Kiraly and Ricci Luyties, Saunders and Kiraly also helped the U.S win the gold in 1984 in Los Angeles. Partie won a bronze medal in the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain.

UCLA’S OLYMPIC TEAM MEMBERS 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 Giova- nazzi (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)

John Speraw served as head coach and guided the 2000– Dan Landry, Jeff Nygaard U.S. Men’s Volleyball Team to a bronze medal at the Erik Sullivan, Bjorn Maaseide (Norway), Mark 2016 Rio Games. He was an assistant coach of the Williams (Australia), Kevin Wong gold medal-winning U.S. Men’s team in 2008, at the Karch Kiraly (above and left) and 2004– Bjorn Maaseide (Norway), Beijing Games, and also in 2012, at the London Games. Kent Steffes (far left below) won the Stein Metzger, Jeff Nygaard gold medal in the inaugural beach Erik Sullivan, Mark Williams (Australia) volleyball competition in Atlanta 2008– John Speraw (Assistant Coach) in 1996. With his two indoor gold 2012– John Speraw (Assistant Coach) medals and his beach gold, Kiraly Karch Kiraly (Assistant Coach) is the only male volleyball player in Olympic history to win three 2016– John Speraw* (Head Coach-men) gold medals. He coached the U.S. Karch Kiraly* (Head Coach-women) Women’s team to a bronze medal Team won Gold medal in bold at the 2016 Rio Games. *Team won Bronze medal

Photos courtesy of Getty Images, USA Volleyball and the USOC.

47 RECORDS

Clockwise from left corner: Kevin Wong, Jeff Nygaard, Mark Williams (Australia), Dan Landry, Stein Metzger, Erik Sullivan and John Speraw (middle). Over 30 former volleyball players have represented UCLA in the Olympic Games. Photos courtesy of USA Volleyball.

48 RECORDS

PAULEY PAVILION RECORD Pauley Pavilion, presented by Wescom, is the home of UCLA’s championship volleyball, basketball and gymnastics teams. The 1970...... 10-0 site of the 1984 Olympic gymnastics competition where the U.S. men’s team earned a gold medal, Pauley Pavilion has been the host 1971...... 10-0 1972...... 8-1 site for an unprecedented 15 NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championships (1970, ’71, ’75, ’77, ’79, ’84, ’85, ’87, ’89, ’93, ’96, ’99, ‘05, 1973...... 8-2 ‘13 and 2018). 1974...... 9-2 1975 ...... 9-2 Championship history lives in this pavilion. From the rafters hang 11 NCAA championship banners won by the UCLA men’s 1976...... 7-0 basketball teams. UCLA men’s volleyball teams have won nine of their 19 NCAA championships here, and the men’s gymnastics team 1977 ...... 9-0 1978 ...... 11-0 captured national championships in the arena in 1984 and ’87. The Bruin women’s volleyball team earned two of its four NCAA titles 1979 ...... 14-0 on the Pauley hardwood. In the Spring of 2004, the women’s gymnastics team won its fi rst NCAA championship in Pauley. 1980 ...... 12-0 1981 ...... 13-0 The Pavilion has hosted some of the largest collegiate volleyball crowds in history. In 1984, the men’s NCAA championship match 1982...... 10-0 between UCLA and Pepperdine drew 9,809 fans to set a collegiate record that stood for 15 years. The 1987 NCAA championship 1983...... 8-3 1984 ...... 9-0 match between the Bruins and USC Trojans attracted 8,952 spectators. The 1993 NCAA fi nal between UCLA and CS Northridge drew 1985 ...... 13-2 8,482 fans and the 1996 fi nal between the Bruins and Hawaii attracted 7,688 fans. 1986 ...... 9-4 1987 ...... 17-0 Renovation of the storied building began in the Spring of 2010 and was completed in October 2012. Highlights of the renovation 1988 ...... 6-3 and expansion include a new seating bowl, a retractable seating system on the event level that includes a new fl oor system and over 1989 ...... 12-3 1990 ...... 6-2 1,000 seats. The facility features a new center-hung HD video board and LED ribbon board. The renovation has allowed for additional 1991...... 8-1 points of sale for concession and an increased number of restrooms. The North side of the building includes two large locker rooms 1992...... 7-2 1993...... 10-1 with lounges and a fi lm room. Other amenities for the student-athletes include a sports medicine room, weight room, equipment oomr 1994...... 7-0 and storage. The Pavilion Club on the mezzanine of the same structure will serve the campus for numerous special events. UCLA 1995...... 8-0 1996...... 10-1 dedicated the fl oor in Pauley Pavilion as “Nell and John Wooden Court” prior to a UCLA men’s basketball game against Michigan tateS 1997...... 10-1 on Dec. 20, 2003. 1998...... 11-2 1999...... 5-3 2000...... 8-2 2001...... 9-3 2002...... 12-2 2003...... 7-8 2004...... 12-2 2005...... 15-3 2006...... 12-4 2007...... 13-2 2008...... 10-5 2009...... 9-4 2010...... 7-7 2011...... 7-3 2013...... 6-4 2014...... 7-3 2015...... 4-6 2016...... 10-1 2017...... 8-1 2018...... 13-2 2019...... 7-1 Totals: ...... 462-98 (.825)

JOHN WOODEN CENTER RECORD 1984 ...... 6-0 1985 ...... 1-0 1986 ...... 3-1 1987 ...... 1-0 1988 ...... 2-0 1989 ...... 3-0 1990 ...... 4-0 1991...... 3-2 1992...... 3-1 1993...... 3-0 1994...... 6-0 1995...... 3-0 1996...... 4-0 1997...... 1-1 1998...... 4-0 1999...... 3-0 2000...... 2-1 2001...... 2-0 2002...... 1-0 2003...... 0-0 2004...... 1-0 2005...... 0-0 2006...... 1-0 2007-09 ...... 0-0 2010...... 1-0 2011...... 1-2 2012...... 9-3 2013...... 3-1 2014...... 1-0 2015...... 2-0 2016...... 2-2 2017...... 2-3 2018...... 6-0 The fans turned out in big numbers to witness the 2018 NCAA Championship match between UCLA and Long Beach State. 2019...... 3-0 Totals: ...... 87-17 (.837)

49 RECORDS

Caps = home match; * = conf. match

(19-9, 8-4 MPSF: 2nd Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 7) 2019 (25-7, 17-5 MPSF: T-2nd Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 3) (21-11, 16-8 MPSF: 4th Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 4) J2 PRINCETON 25-17, 26-24, 25-18 W 3-0 2016 2013 J5 at George Mason 25-23, 25-12, 25-20 W 3-0 J4 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 25-27,21-25,25-22,25-14,15-13 W 3-2 J5 UC SAN DIEGO (wc) 25-20, 25-13, 23-25, 25-19 W 3-1 J9 at CSUN 22-25, 16-25, 23-25 L 0-3 J7 Ohio St. (at Penn St. Tny.) 24-26, 25-22, 25-22, 25-22 W 3-1 J4 UC San Diego (at UCSB Invit.) 26-24, 25-19, 22-25, 17-25, 15-8 W 3-2 J11 at McKendree 25-20, 29-27, 25-21 W 3-0 J8 at Penn St. (at Penn St. Tny.) 25-23, 22-25, 25-18, 21-25, 15-8 W 3-2 J5 UC Irvine (at UCSB Invit.) 17-25,17-25,26-24,25-22,13-15 L 2-3 J12 at Lindenwood 26-24, 25-17, 25-23 W 3-0 J15 at UC Irvine* 25-19, 24-26, 25-23, 25-23 W 3-1 J8 CSUN* 25-18,19-25,25-19,18-25,15-13 W 3-2 J16 UC SANTA BARBARA 25-20, 25-16, 25-21 W 3-0 J16 at UC San Diego* 25-18, 25-17, 25-14 W 3-0 J10 Penn St. (at Outrigger Tny) 19-25,25-18,18-25,25-21,15-10 W 3-2 J19 LONG BEACH STATE 27-29, 22-25, 17-25 L 0-3 J20 at Cal Baptist* 27-25, 25-21, 25-12 W 3-0 J11 Ohio St. (at Outrigger Tny) 17-25,25-22,18-25,25-18,15-13 W 3-2 J25 at UC San Diego 20-25, 25-17, 25-15, 25-23 W 3-1 J23 USC* 27-25, 23-25, 25-21, 25-19 W 3-1 J12 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 25-20,23-25,25-20,24-26,14-16 L 2-3 J31 at Loyola-Chicago 27-25, 23-25, 25-21, 25-23 W 3-1 J25 PRINCETON 25-19, 25-23, 25-16 W 3-0 J15 LONG BEACH ST.* 23-25,22-25,25-16,17-25 L 1-3 F2 at Lewis 18-25, 25-20, 25-19, 25-20 W 3-1 J27 LONG BEACH ST.* 23-25, 22-25, 25-19, 25-22, 15-13 W 3-2 J18 at UC Santa Barbara* 21-25,25-17,25-17,25-19 W 3-1 F7 STANFORD* 21-25, 25-14, 16-25, 26-24, 15-10 W 3-2 J29 CSUN* 20-25, 25-23, 27-25, 25-19 W 3-1 J22 at Stanford* 25-27,25-19,14-25,12-25 L 1-3 F9 BYU* (wc) 16-25, 25-14, 25-19, 25-18 W 3-1 F5 at Hawai’i* 25-18, 20-25, 23-25, 18-25 L 1-3 J27 at Pacifi c* 25-22,25-19,25-12 W 3-0 F13 at UC Santa Barbara18-25, 25-21, 20-25, 25-19, 12-15 L 2-3 F6 at Hawai’i* 22-25, 25-22, 19-25, 25-18, 15-9 W 3-2 J29 UC IRVINE* 19-25,25-22,25-20,20-25,11-15 L 2-3 F16 at Long Beach State 20-25, 17-25, 19-25 L 0-3 F11 UC IRVINE* 17-25, 25-18, 23-25, 26-24, 18-20 L 2-3 F2 at UC San Diego* 25-10, 33-31, 25-22 W 3-0 F20 at Concordia* 25-17, 26-24, 25-17 W 3-0 F13 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 25-16, 25-17, 25-18 W 3-0 F7 at Cal Baptist* 28-30,25-23,25-27,25-23,12-15 L 2-3 F24 USC* 25-21, 25-21, 25-22 W 3-0 F19 at Pepperdine* 32-30, 25-21, 25-19 W 3-0 F9 at BYU* 22-25,15-25,23-25 L 0-3 F27 PEPPERDINE* 29-31, 17-25, 25-20, 25-18, 15-9 W 3-2 F21 at Stanford* 21-25, 25-20, 22-25, 20-25 L 1-3 F15 HAWAI’I* 26-24,25-17,25-23 W 3-0 M1 at Grand Canyon* 25-20, 21-25, 25-23, 25-23 W 3-1 F24 CAL BAPTIST* 25-18, 25-19, 25-13 W 3-0 F16 HAWAI’I* 25-23,18-25,25-19,23-25,12-15 L 2-3 M8 Ohio State (at USC) 25-21, 25-20, 25-21 W 3-0 F27 at USC* 25-16, 25-20, 25-27, 25-16 W 3-1 F18 at USC* 25-18,25-21,25-17 W 3-0 M9 Penn State (at USC) 25-12, 25-19, 25-21 W 3-0 M2 UC SANTA BARBARA*(wc) 21-25, 25-22, 25-18, 25-18 W 3-1 F23 at Pepperdine* 25-18,25-17,25-18 W 3-0 M14 at BYU* 32-30, 25-21, 20-25, 16-25, 15-17 L 2-3 M4 at UC Santa Barbara* 25-22, 25-15, 25-23 W 3-0 F27 UC SANTA BARBARA* 19-25,25-22,23-25,19-25 L 1-3 M16 at Stanford* 25-23, 21-25, 19-25, 25-23, 10-15 L 2-3 M7 BALL STATE 25-19, 25-18, 25-20 W 3-0 M8 PACIFIC* 25-19,25-19,25-20 W 3-0 M27 at Pepperdine* 21-25, 31-29, 16-25, 17-25 L 1-3 M11 CONCORDIA (Irvine) 25-23, 25-21, 25-18 W 3-0 M10 STANFORD* 25-21,25-23,29-27 W 3-0 M31 GRAND CANYON* (wc) 25-18, 19-25, 25-23, 25-22 W 3-1 M24 at CSUN* 19-25, 25-20, 23-25, 25-16, 15-7 W 3-2 M13 at Long Beach St.* 21-25,21-25,25-19,26-24,15-10 W 3-2 A4 CONCORDIA* 25-19, 25-19, 25-19 W 3-0 M26 at Long Beach St.* 25-22, 25-22, 25-22 W 3-0 M15 at CSUN* 20-25,25-19,22-25,25-13,15-10 W 3-2 A6 at USC* 25-19, 15-25, 25-14, 20-25, 11-15 L 2-3 A1 BYU* (wc) 17-25, 25-19, 25-27, 13-25 L 1-3 M29 at UC San Diego* 25-20, 25-18, 25-20 W 3-0 A13 CONCORDIA (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-21, 25-23, 25-17 W 3-0 A2 BYU* (wc) 25-20, 20-25, 18-25, 23-25 L 1-3 M30 at UC Irvine* 25-16, 25-16, 19-25, 25-17 W 3-1 A18 USC (MPSF semis at Pepperdine) 21-25, 18-25, 27-25, 23-25 L 2-3 A7 STANFORD* 27-25, 25-18, 25-22 W 3-0 A4 CAL BAPTIST* 25-21, 18-25, 19-25, 20-25 L 1-3 A9 PEPPERDINE* 25-18, 21-25, 25-16, 25-23 W 3-1 A6 BYU* 25-23,25-19,25-20 W 3-0 A16 HAWAI’I (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-16, 25-16, 22-25, 25-21 W 3-1 A10 PEPPERDINE 25-22,25-20,25-23 W 3-0 A21 Long Beach St. (MPSF semis at BYU) 26-24, 28-26, 25-19 W 3-0 A12 USC* 25-16, 25-18, 25-15 W 3-0 (26-8, 9-3 MPSF: 2nd Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 2) A23 at BYU (MPSF playoffs-champ.) 20-25,19-25, 25-18, 15-25 L 1-3 A20 PEPPERDINE (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-19, 25-18,25-18 W 3-0 2018 M5 Ohio St. (NCAA semis at Penn St.) 25-22, 22-25, 21-25, 25-20, 16-18 L 2-3 A25 at BYU (MPSF semis) 25-23,25-21,18-25,24-26,10-15 L 2-3 J3 New Jersey Insti. of Technology(wc) 25-17, 25-22, 25-20 W 3-0 J5 KING (wc) 25-17, 25-16, 25-11 W 3-0 J6 McKENDREE (wc) 25-21, 25-22, 29-27 W 3-0 (13-14, 9-13 MPSF: 8th Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 12) J10 UC IRVINE 21-25, 19-25, 25-20, 25-16, 16-14 W 3-2 2015 2012 (22-8, 16-6 MPSF: 5th Place; Coach Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 5) J9 St. Francis (at UCSB Invit.) 23-25,25-14,25-23,25-22 W 3-1 J16 at UC San Diego 25-23, 25-18, 25-18 W 3-0 J6 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 25-19,25-23,24-26,25-17 W 3-1 J9 IPFW (at UCSB Invit.) 25-23,25-23,17-25,25-19 W 3-1 J18 PENN STATE (AVCA Showcase) 25-15, 19-25, 25-20, 25-22 W 3-1 J6 Ohio St. (at UCSB Invit.) 25-16, 25-19, 25-16 W 3-0 J10 Limestone (at UCSB Invit.) 25-14,25-15,25-9 W 3-0 J20 OHIO STATE (AVCA Showcase) 25-18, 22-25, 27-25, 24-26, 16-14 W 3-2 J7 UC Irvine (at UCSB Invit.) 25-23, 21-25,33-35, 18-25 L 1-3 J16 at BYU* 12-25,17-25,17-25 L 0-3 J26 at Hawai’i 25-23, 23-25, 23-25, 19-25 L 1-3 J12 Lewis (at Outrigger Tny) 27-25, 23-25, 25-15, 25-18 W 3-1 J17 at BYU* 25-17,24-26,20-25,15-25 L 1-3 J28 at Hawai’i 22-25, 25-20, 25-22, 32-30 W 3-1 J13 Springfi eld (at Outrigger Tny) 25-20, 25-21, 25-22 W 3-0 J25 PRINCETON (wc) 25-18,25-21,25-21 W 3-0 F1 PRINCETON (wc) 25-21, 25-17, 25-16 W 3-0 J14 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 25-22, 25-23, 25-23 W 3-0 J27 PEPPERDINE* 10-25,20-25,23-25 L 0-3 F3 at UC Irvine 25-21, 25-22, 18-25, 25-19 W 3-1 J20 STANFORD* 25-23, 25-22, 25-17 W 3-0 J29 STANFORD* (wc) 27-25,25-22,25-21 W 3-0 F6 CSUN 25-21, 23-25, 25-18, 25-19 W 3-1 F4 at Long Beach St.* 25-17,20-25,22-25,23-25 L 1-3 J21 PACIFIC* 25-17, 25-18, 25-20 W 3-0 F8 at Concordia* 25-18, 28-26, 25-17 W 3-0 F6 at CSUN* 25-17,17-25,25-18,25-16 W 3-1 J25 CSUN* 25-18, 25-15, 25-12 W 3-0 F10 at Grand Canyon* 25-19, 25-18, 25-18 W 3-0 F13 UC SANTA BARBARA* 20-25,21-25,24-26 L 0-3 J27 UC SANTA BARBARA* 25-18, 25-20, 25-19 W 3-0 F14 USC* 25-15, 25-18, 25-19 W 3-0 F17 CAL BAPTIST* 25-20,25-17,25-19 W 3-0 F1 at Pepperdine* 25-21, 21-25, 25-14, 21-25, 15-11 W 3-2 F17 at Long Beach State 25-23, 15-25, 19-25, 21-25 L 1-3 F22 USC* 25-15,25-23,22-25,25-22 W 3-1 F3 at USC* 27-25, 25-15, 25-23 W 3-0 F21 LONG BEACH STATE 21-25, 25-23, 19-25, 21-25 L 1-3 F27 at UC Irvine* 19-25,17-25,17-25 L 0-3 F10 at UC Santa Barbara* 25-17, 25-18, 22-25, 25-20 W 3-1 F23 at Pepperdine* 21-25, 23-25, 20-25 L 0-3 F28 at UC San Diego* 25-22,25-21,25-16 W 3-0 F14 at Long Beach St.* 16-25, 18-25, 25-20, 27-25, 9-15 L 2-3 M1 at Stanford* 25-12, 25-16, 18-25, 25-21 W 3-1 M3 CSUN* 16-25,25-21,25-22,25-23 W 3-1 F17 at Hawai’i* 25-21, 25-20, 25-21 W 3-0 M3 at BYU* 23-25, 21-25, 20-25 L 0-3 M6 LONG BEACH ST.* 25-20,23-25,25-27,25-23, 11-15 L 2-3 F18 at Hawai’i* 25-21, 25-14, 25-19 W 3-0 M7 PEPPERDINE* 25-17, 17-25, 26-24, 25-17 W 3-1 M13 at UC Santa Barbara* 14-25,25-22,16-25,20-25 L 1-3 F24 CAL BAPTIST* 25-16, 25-19, 25-15 W 3-0 M10 GEORGE MASON 25-17, 25-13, 25-20 W 3-0 M26 at Cal Baptist* 25-19,25-20,20-25,25-23 W 3-1 F29 LONG BEACH ST.* 25-18, 25-20, 25-21 W 3-0 M14 CONCORDIA* (wc) 25-22, 25-15, 25-19 W 3-0 M28 at USC* 25-19,22-25,25-14,22-25,11-15 L 2-3 M2 at CSUN* 28-26, 25-15, 25-22 W 3-0 M16 GRAND CANYON* (wc) 25-15, 25-20, 22-25, 25-21 W 3-1 M30 HAWAI’I* 25-22,25-23,15-25,19-25,8-15 L 2-3 M8 UC SAN DIEGO* 25-21, 25-20, 28-26 W 3-0 M28 UC SANTA BARBARA 25-22, 25-15, 25-18 W 3-0 M31 HAWAI’I* 13-25,18-25,18-25 L 0-3 M10 UC IRVINE* 22-25, 25-23, 18-25, 27-25, 13-15 L 2-3 M31 at USC* 25-18, 23-25, 23-25, 25-19, 11-15 L 2-3 A7 at Pepperdine* 21-25, 21-25,19-25 L 0-3 M14 USC* 18-25, 22-25, 23-25 L 0-3 A5 STANFORD* 25-15, 20-25, 25-22, 25-15 W 3-1 A10 UC IRVINE* 19-25,25-21,21-25,20-25 L 1-3 M16 PEPPERDINE* 25-18, 31-29, 26-24 W 3-0 A7 BYU* 25-21, 25-23, 25-22 W 3-0 A11 UC SAN DIEGO* 26-24,25-17,25-18 W 3-0 A14 STANFORD (MPSF Qfi nals-Pauley) 25-19, 25-15, 25-18 W 3-0 M30 at UC San Diego* 20-25, 21-25, 25-21, 21-25 L 1-3 A17 at Stanford* 25-18,25-19,25-20 W 3-0 A 19 Concordia (MPSF Semis-@BYU) 26-28, 25-21, 26-24, 25-18 W 3-1 M31 at UC Irvine* 25-21, 25-21, 25-23 W 3-0 A25 at UC Irvine (MPSF Qfi nals) 17-25,18-25, 15-25 L 0-3 A21 at BYU (MPSF Champ.) 25-17, 21-25, 18-25, 21-25 L 1-3 A6 BYU* 29-27, 25-16, 22-25, 18-25, 16-18 L 2-3 M1 HARVARD (NCAA Op. Rd.-Pauley) 23-25, 25-21, 25-11, 25-21 W 3-1 A7 BYU* 25-17, 25-19, 25-17 W 3-0 M3 BYU (NCAA Semis) 25-22, 24-26, 29-27, 25-19 W 3-1 A13 at Pacifi c* 25-22, 21-25, 25-17, 25-19 W 3-1 M5 LONG BEACH ST. (NCAA Champ.)19-25, 25-23, 25-20, 24-26, 12-15 L 3-2 A14 at Stanford* 18-25, 21-25, 18-25 L 0-3 2014 (18-11, 15-9 MPSF: T5th Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 9) A21 at UC Irvine (MPSF Qfi nals) 14-25,25-23, 16-25, 23-25 L 1-3 J4 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 25-22,18-25,20-25,22-25 L 1-3 J9 Penn St. (at Outrigger Tny) 25-15,22-25,23-25,25-21,16-14 W 3-2 2017 (17-10, 10-8 MPSF: 5th Place; Coach: John Speraw; Final AVCA Rank: 6) J10 Ohio State (at Outrigger Tny) 25-14,25-23,25-21 W 3-0 J11 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 25-19, 14-25, 25-19, 25-16 W 3-1 J3 at Loyola-Chicago 25-19, 25-18, 25-16 W 3-0 2011 (16-15, 9-13 MPSF: 8th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 10) J17 STANFORD* 23-25,25-22,25-23,29-31,15-11 W 3-2 J6 Penn St. (at Ohio St. Tny.) 25-18, 25-22, 25-17 W 3-0 J7 UC San Diego (at UCSB Invit.) 25-22, 25-12, 23-25, 25-15 W 3-1 J18 PACIFIC* 25-19,25-16,25-18 W 3-0 J7 at Ohio St. (at Ohio St. Tny.) 22-25, 25-18, 21-25, 23-25 L 1-3 J7 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 13-25, 25-23, 25-27, 23-25 L 1-3 J21 UC SANTA BARBARA* 25-12,25-22,29-27 W 3-0 J12 UC Irvine* 25-16, 25-18, 25-22 W 3-0 J8 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 17-25, 20-25, 25-19, 25-16, 15-13 W 3-2 J27 UC IRVINE* 25-14,25-23,25-23 W 3-0 J14 UC San Diego* 25-15, 25-13, 25-17 W 3-0 J13 Penn State (at Outrigger Tny) 23-25, 25-19, 25-22, 25-18 W 3-1 J30 at UC San Diego* 25-19,25-18,25-20 W 3-0 J18 Cal Baptist* 25-21, 25-17, 25-22 W 3-0 J14 Ball State (at Outrigger Tny) 25-22, 25-20, 23-25, 30-28 W 3-1 F1 at UC Irvine* 25-19,25-21,20-25,25-18 W 3-1 J20 USC* 25-20, 23-25, 25-20, 25-22 W 3-1 J15 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 25-19, 25-14, 25-21 W 3-0 F5 at Pepperdine* 14-25,20-25,19-25 L 0-3 J25 UC SANTA BARBARA* 25-17, 25-20, 25-20 W 3-0 J19 CSUN* 25-19, 25-19, 22-25, 25-17 W 3-1 F9 at USC* 25-20,25-23,25-19 W 3-0 J27 at UC Santa Barbara* 25-22, 25-22, 25-17 W 3-0 J21 at Long Beach St.* 25-19, 25-22, 14-25, 20-25, 13-15 L 2-3 F12 LONG BEACH ST.* 16-25,20-25,25-22,23-25 L 1-3 J29 PRINCETON 25-15, 25-23, 27-25 W 3-0 J26 PEPPERDINE* 25-21, 25-20, 25-20 W 3-0 F14 CSUN* 25-15,25-18,34-32 W 3-0 F3 at BYU* 26-28, 23-25, 25-13, 25-22, 16-18 L 2-3 J28 USC* 22-25, 25-23, 24-26, 16-25 L 1-3 F23 at Pacifi c* 25-15,28-26,25-20 W 3-0 F4 at BYU* 13-25, 23-25, 29-31 L 0-3 F4 at BYU* 17-25, 25-14, 23-25, 21-25 L 1-3 F24 at Stanford* 25-23,28-26,20-25,19-25,17-15 W 3-2 F9 at Stanford* 27-29, 27-25, 25-23, 27-29, 11-15 L 2-3 F5 at BYU* 21-25, 25-27, 20-25 L 0-3 F28 at Hawai’i* 23-25,24-26,27-25,22-25 L 1-3 F11 at Pepperdine* 23-25, 25-19, 21-25, 25-23, 15-7 W 3-2 M1 at Hawai’i* 25-22,18-25,26-24,16-25,11-15 L 2-3 F9 UC SANTA BARBARA* 11-25, 23-25, 25-18, 25-27 L 1-3 F15 CSUN* 25-20, 21-25, 25-20, 23-25, 9-15 L 2-3 M5 at UC Santa Barbara* 20-25,19-25,20-25 L 0-3 F11 at UC Santa Barbara* 25-23, 18-25, 2-25, 20-25 L 1-3 F18 LONG BEACH ST.* (wc) 20-25, 23-25, 22-25 L 0-3 M8 UC SAN DIEGO* 25-18,25-21,25-15 W 3-0 F17 HAWAI’I* 25-21, 25-22, 28-26 W 3-0 F24 at UC Irvine* 23-25, 26-28, 25-22, 25-21, 15-17 L 2-3 M11 PEPPERDINE* 18-25,30-28,23-25,22-25 L 1-3 F19 HAWAI’I* 19-25, 21-25, 22-25 L 0-3 F25 at UC San Diego* 25-19, 25-21, 22-25, 25-21 W 3-1 M15 USC* 20-25,25-19,17-25,23-25 L 1-3 F25 at Stanford* 24-26, 25-21, 22-25, 17-25 L 1-3 M8 LEWIS 25-20, 25-21, 20-25, 25-18 W 3-1 M27 at Cal Baptist* 25-22,21-25,25-18,25-23 W 3-1 F26 at Pacifi c* 25-23, 25-19, 25-15 W 3-0 M11 HARVARD 25-11, 25-17, 25-17 W 3-0 M29 at BYU* 25-22,22-25,26-28,21-25 L 1-3 M2 at CSUN* 26-24, 27-25, 25-23 W 3-0 M17 SACRED HEART (wc) 25-15, 25-19, 25-15 W 3-0 A3 at CSUN* 22-25,25-19,26-28,25-16, 21-23 L 2-3 M4 LONG BEACH ST.* 18-25, 25-16, 25-19, 23-25, 15-13 W 3-2 M18 CONCORDIA (Irvine) (wc) 25-22, 23-25, 23-25, 25-16, 15-9 W 3-2 A5 at Long Beach St.* 23-25,26-24,26-24,18-25,15-13 W 3-2 M9 PENN STATE 25-23, 24-26, 25-20, 22-25, 19-17 W 3-2 M29 at USC* 25-18, 25-19, 25-17 W 3-0 A10 CAL BAPTIST* 25-20,25-12,25-23 W 3-0 M11 LOYOLA-CHICAGO 24-26, 25-18, 24-26, 25-20, 15-8 W 3-2 A1 at Cal Baptist* 25-23, 23-25, 25-15, 23-25, 20-18 W 3-2 A12 BYU* (wc) 25-23,23-25,25-13,25-20 W 3-1 M24 UC IRVINE* 25-20, 26-24, 25-21 W 3-0 A7 HAWAI’I* (wc) 28-26, 23-25, 21-25, 18-25 L 1-3 A19 at UC Santa Barbara(MPSF Qfi nals) 25-23,20-25,25-18,20-25,12-15 L 2-3 M26 at UC San Diego* 25-20, 25-23, 25-21 W 3-0 A8 HAWAI’I* (wc) 39-41, 23-25, 25-18, 22-25 L 1-3 A15 at UC Irvine (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-23, 23-25, 21-25, 22-25 L 1-3 50 RECORDS

M30 at UC Irvine* 25-19, 24-26, 20-25, 15-25 L 1-3 M1 at Ball State 21-30, 26-30, 24-30 L 0-3 J15 UC IRVINE* 30-22, 36-34, 30-23 W 3-0 A 1 UC SAN DIEGO* 21-25, 21-25, 22-25 L 0-3 M4 LEWIS 30-27, 23-30, 30-25, 30-24 W 3-1 J19 PEPPERDINE* 30-18, 30-21, 30-27 W 3-0 A8 PACIFIC* 25-19, 25-19, 25-22 W 3-0 M5 UC SANTA CRUZ 30-20, 27-30, 30-15, 30-25 W 3-1 J21 USC* (Kilgour Cup) 30-27, 24-30, 36-34, 30-27 W 3-1 A9 STANFORD* 18-25, 18-25, 17-25 L 0-3 M7 at UC Irvine* 25-30, 30-27, 30-28, 19-30, 15-10 W 3-2 J28 at BYU* 29-31, 22-30, 30-27, 28-30 L 1-3 A14 at USC* 12-25, 22-25, 21-25 L 0-3 M13 BYU* 25-30, 27-30, 27-30 L 0-3 J29 at BYU* 30-21, 30-24, 30-26 W 3-0 A16 at Pepperdine* 19-25, 25-22, 20-25, 23-25 L 1-3 M14 BYU* 30-28, 23-30, 30-23, 30-21 W 3-1 F2 at CSUN* 30-18, 30-26, 30-26 W 3-0 A23 at USC (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-23, 18-25, 18-25, 21-25 L 1-3 M28 at UC San Diego* 30-26, 25-30, 30-32, 33-31, 9-15 L 2-3 F4 at UC Santa Barbara* 30-20, 30-25, 28-30, 22-30, 15-12 W 3-2 M29 at Long Beach St.* 30-26, 30-23, 17-30, 30-28 W 3-1 F9 LONG BEACH ST.* 30-21, 30-21, 30-28 W 3-0 A2 UC SANTA BARBARA* 29-31, 30-21, 30-24, 33-31 W 3-1 F11 UC SAN DIEGO* 30-15, 30-24, 30-21 W 3-0 A4 CSUN* 25-30, 28-30, 24-30 L 0-3 F17 STANFORD* 30-21, 30-20, 31-33, 30-26 W 3-1 2010 (16-14, 11-11 MPSF: 7th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 9) A11 at Stanford* 30-24, 27-30, 20-30, 28-30 L 1-3 F19 PACIFIC* 30-22, 30-22, 27-30, 30-16 W 3-1 J7 UC San Diego (at UCSB Invit.) 30-24, 24-30, 26-30, 31-29, 15-8 W 3-2 A12 at Pacifi c* 30-24, 30-23, 30-23 W 3-0 F25 HAWAI’I* 30-22, 30-26, 28-30, 37-35 W 3-1 J7 BYU (at UCSB Invit.) 26-30, 30-24, 30-27, 24-30, 11-15 L 2-3 A19 PEPPERDINE (MPSF Qfi nals) 27-30, 30-20, 21-30, 28-30 L 1-3 F26 HAWAI’I* 25-30, 26-30, 25-30 L 0-3 J8 Cal Baptist (at UCSB Invit.) 33-35, 29-31, 19-30 L 0-3 M2 at UC Irvine* 30-22, 16-30, 30-22, 31-29 W 3-1 J13 USC* 26-30, 31-29, 26-30, 28-30 L 1-3 M8 PENN STATE 30-22, 30-27, 30-28 W 3-0 J15 PEPPERDINE* 27-30, 22-30, 23-30 L 0-3 M10 at USC* 29-31, 30-25, 30-28, 30-27 W 3-1 J20 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-19, 23-30, 24-30, 30-25, 15-11 W 3-2 2007(19-11, 13-9 MPSF: 5th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank:7) M12 at Pepperdine* 30-28, 34-36, 26-30, 30-27, 13-15 L 2-3 J22 at CSUN* 30-21, 30-24, 30-21 W 3-0 J5 Pacifi c 30-27, 28-30, 30-27, 30-24 W 3-1 M16 RUTGERS-NEWARK 30-16, 30-12, 30-20 W 3-0 J29 BYU* 40-38, 30-21, 30-24 W 3-0 J5 UC Santa Barbara 30-22, 36-34, 30-26 W 3-0 M17 GEORGE MASON 30-24, 30-21, 30-23 W 3-0 J30 BYU* 29-31, 30-27, 30-28, 29-31, 11-15 L 2-3 J6 UC Irvine 22-30, 26-30, 23-30 L 0-3 A1 at Pacifi c* 30-21, 30-20, 30-18 W 3-0 F4 at Hawai’i* 27-30, 30-25, 30-26, 30-25 W 3-1 J12 at BYU* 28-30, 22-30, 26-30 L 0-3 A2 at Stanford* 25-30, 35-33, 30-21, 36-34 W 3-1 F5 at Hawai’i* 30-26, 23-30, 30-25, 30-28 W 3-1 J13 at BYU* 21-30, 23-30, 31-33 L 0-3 A6 CSUN* 30-23, 33-31, 27-30, 30-27 W 3-1 F12 at Stanford* 24-30, 23-30, 24-30 L 0-3 J17 at UC Santa Barbara* 33-31, 30-27, 28-30, 27-30, 6-15 L 2-3 A9 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-28, 30-27, 30-20 W 3-0 F13 at Pacifi c* 30-26, 30-26, 30-27 W 3-0 J19 at CSUN* 27-30, 30-23, 30-25, 23-30, 15-10 W 3-2 A14 at Long Beach St.* 27-30, 30-24, 29-31, 29-31 L 1-3 F17 at UC Santa Barbara* 30-28, 30-25, 19-30, 30-24 W 3-1 J24 PEPPERDINE* 30-21, 26-30, 35-33, 27-30, 14-16 L 2-3 A15 at UC San Diego* 26-30, 30-23, 35-37, 30-20, 18-16 W 3-2 F19 CSUN* 27-30, 28-30, 30-28, 30-14, 15-12 W 3-2 J27 USC* 19-30, 29-31, 31-33 L 0-3 A23 CSUN (MPSF Qfi nals) 25-30, 27-30, 30-18, 30-22, 14-16 L 2-3 F24 UC SAN DIEGO* 22-30, 25-30, 26-30 L 0-3 J31 HAWAI’I* 30-25, 33-31, 28-30, 31-29 W 3-1 M5 PENN STATE (NCAA semis-at UCLA) 30-20, 30-24, 30-27 W 3-0 F26 LONG BEACH ST.* 23-30, 26-30, 23-30 L 0-3 F2 HAWAI’I* 30-21, 30-26, 30-27 W 3-0 M7 PEPPERDINE (NCAA champ.-at UCLA) 23-30, 30-23, 30-24, 25-30, 10-15 L 2-3 M3 LEWIS 30-22, 30-27, 30-25 W 3-0 F9 PACIFIC* 30-26, 27-30, 28-30, 40-38, 15-12 W 3-2 M5 UC IRVINE* 34-32, 23-30, 28-30, 28-30 L 1-3 F10 STANFORD* 30-25, 30-28, 34-32 W 3-0 M10 BALL STATE 30-26, 30-18, 30-27 W 3-0 F16 at Pacifi c* 22-30, 24-30, 27-30 L 0-3 2004 (24-6, 17-5 MPSF: 3rd Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 3) M12 LOYOLA-CHICAGO 30-16, 30-27, 30-24 W 3-0 F17 at Stanford* 28-30, 30-23, 30-19, 30-22 W 3-1 J9 Pacifi c(at UCSB Invit.) 30-22, 30-25, 30-28 W 3-0 M24 GRAND CANYON 30-17, 30-14, 30-20 W 3-0 F21 CSUN* 30-16, 30-23, 30-26 W 3-0 J10 USC (at UCSB Invit.) 30-21, 30-21, 30-21 W 3-0 M27 at UC Irvine* 26-30, 30-18, 35-33, 20-30, 17-15 W 3-2 F23 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-28, 30-24, 30-32, 30-19 W 3-1 J10 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 30-19, 29-31, 30-21, 26-30, 15-12 W 3-2 M31 at Pepperdine* 24-30, 30-25, 21-30, 30-23, 10-15 L 2-3 F28 at Long Beach St.* 23-30, 30-24, 30-26, 23-30, 14-16 L 2-3 J14 LA VERNE 30-17, 30-16, 30-21 W 3-0 A3 at USC* 26-30, 21-30, 23-30 L 0-3 M2 UC SAN DIEGO* 30-27, 30-23, 30-25 W 3-0 J16 at Stanford* 28-30, 25-30, 30-25, 28-30 L 1-3 A9 at Long Beach St.* 30-24, 22-30, 23-30, 30-28, 16-14 W 3-2 M7 LOYOLA-CHICAGO 30-26, 30-23, 30-22 W 3-0 J18 at Pacifi c* 27-30, 30-11, 30-19, 30-27 W 3-1 A10 at UC San Diego* 26-30, 25-30, 34-32, 27-30 L 1-3 M9 at UC Irvine* 26-30, 28-30, 21-30 L 0-3 J23 at UC Irvine* 30-24, 30-23, 30-22 W 3-0 A16 STANFORD* 30-24, 23-30, 21-30, 30-26, 15-7 W 3-2 M14 BALL STATE* 30-20, 30-22, 30-11 W 3-0 J29 at USC* 30-25, 30-20, 30-24 W 3-0 A17 PACIFIC* 28-30, 25-30, 28-30 L 0-3 M16 BALL STATE* 30-23, 30-22, 30-21 W 3-0 J31 PEPPERDINE* 30-20, 30-21, 20-30, 30-24 W 3-1 A24 at BYU (MPSF Qfi nals) 28-30, 26-30, 30-26, 26-30 L 1-3 M29 at Pepperdine* 30-28, 26-30, 25-30, 21-30 L 1-3 F4 UC SANTA CRUZ 30-18, 30-14, 30-25 W 3-0 M31 at USC* 30-27, 30-20, 30-26 W 3-0 F6 at CSUN* 30-18, 30-25, 30-24 W 3-0 A4 CAL BAPTIST 30-23, 22-30, 30-25, 20-30, 15-11 W 3-2 F11 LONG BEACH ST.* 19-30, 28-30, 25-30 L 0-3 A6 UC IRVINE* 23-30, 24-30, 30-28, 30-28, 17-15 W 3-2 F13 UC SAN DIEGO* 28-30, 30-18, 30-18, 30-24 W 3-1 2009 (14-16, 10-12 MPSF: 8th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 9) A11 LONG BEACH St.* 30-27, 30-23, 38-36 W 3-0 F18 UC SANTA BARBARA* 23-30, 30-18, 30-25, 30-22 W 3-1 J9 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 30-24, 26-30, 18-30, 21-30 L 1-3 A13 at UC San Diego* 30-26, 30-24, 30-28 W 3-0 F26 at Hawai’i* 30-26, 28-30, 30-25, 26-30, 9-15 L 2-3 J9 Pacifi c (at UCSB Invit.) 30-25, 32-30, 30-26 W 3-0 A21 at UC Santa Barbara (MPSF Qfi nals) 17-30, 35-37, 30-27, 27-30 L 1-3 F28 at Hawai’i* 30-15, 21-30, 30-27, 30-23 W 3-1 J10 UC Irvine (at UCSB Invit.) 30-32, 25-30, 25-30 L 0-3 M3 LEWIS 30-18, 30-27, 30-25 W 3-0 J14 CSUN* 18-30, 27-30, 22-30 L 0-3 M5 PACIFIC* 21-30, 22-30, 30-28, 30-24, 16-14 W 3-2 J16 UC SANTA BARBARA* 33-31, 30-28, 30-28 W 3-0 2006 (26-12, 12-10 NCAA Champions; MPSF: 7th; Coach: Al Scates; Final M6 STANFORD*(Kilgour Cup) 30-28, 28-30, 22-30, 30-24, 17-15 W 3-2 J21 at Long Beach St.* 30-24, 24-30, 30-28, 22-30, 7-15 L 2-3 AVCA Rank: 1) M10 at UC San Diego* 30-27, 30-22, 30-27 W 3-0 J23 UC SAN DIEGO* 30-26, 35-33, 30-22 W 3-0 J6 Stanford 30-14, 30-24, 30-22 W 3-0 M12 at Long Beach St.* 25-30, 28-30, 27-30 L 0-3 J28 CAL BAPTIST 32-34, 30-17, 30-23, 30-25 W 3-1 J6 at UC Santa Barbara 30-23, 30-27, 30-28 W 3-0 M17 UC IRVINE* 27-30, 30-27, 30-23, 30-28 W 3-1 J30 at UC Irvine* 30-20, 24-30, 17-30, 28-30 L 1-3 J7 Long Beach St. 30-25, 34-36, 25-30, 22-30 L 1-3 M30 USC* 30-21, 27-30, 30-25, 30-23 W 3-1 F5 STANFORD* 34-36, 26-30, 30-21, 30-27, 15-11 W 3-2 J13 at UC Irvine* 30-32, 28-30, 24-30 L 0-3 A3 at Pepperdine* 30-26, 30-25, 30-25 W 3-0 F6 PACIFIC* 25-30, 30-22, 30-25, 30-16 W 3-1 J18 Ohio State 27-30, 30-32, 28-30 L 0-3 A8 BYU* 31-33, 26-30, 31-29, 30-32 L 1-3 F13 at Lewis 30-22, 26-30, 26-30, 30-21, 10-15 L 2-3 J19 Penn State 36-34, 30-26, 30-21 W 3-0 A9 BYU* 28-30, 26-30, 30-22, 30-27, 15-9 W 3-2 F14 at Loyola-Chicago 30-22, 26-30, 30-27, 25-30, 20-18 W 3-2 J20 at Hawai’i 30-26, 30-26, 25-30, 27-30, 16-14 W 3-2 A14 CSUN* (w) 30-22, 30-25, 33-31 W 3-0 F18 at Pepperdine* 29-31, 26-30, 25-30 L 0-3 J26 BYU* 30-24, 26-30, 14-30, 24-30 L 1-3 A17 at UC Santa Barbara* 28-30, 30-26, 30-20, 30-17 W 3-1 F20 at USC* 23-30, 30-28, 27-30, 18-30 L 1-3 J28 BYU* 26-30, 30-22, 25-30, 30-26, 19-17 W 3-2 A24 HAWAI’I (MPSF Qfi nals) 30-24, 30-24, 30-28 W 3-0 F25 LONG BEACH ST.* 24-30, 25-30, 29-31 L 0-3 F1 at USC* 27-30, 17-30, 30-27, 26-30 L 1-3 A29 Long Beach St. (MPSF semis-at BYU) 25-30, 27-30, 28-30 L 0-3 F28 at UC San Diego* 21-30, 23-30, 31-33 L 0-3 F3 UC SANTA CRUZ 30-19, 30-19, 30-20 W 3-0 M4 GRAND CANYON 30-19, 30-25, 30-21 W 3-0 F8 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-22, 30-21, 30-26 W 3-0 M6 UC IRVINE* 26-30, 28-30, 30-27, 31-29, 11-15 L 2-3 F10 CSUN* 30-27, 30-25, 22-30, 26-30, 10-15 L 2-3 2003 (15-14, 10-12 MPSF: 9th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 12) M11 at CSUN* 20-30, 30-26, 28-30, 28-30 L 1-3 F16 STANFORD* 30-28, 22-30, 30-21, 30-28 W 3-1 J10 USC (at UC Irvine Tny) 30-25, 32-34, 30-27, 30-24 W 3-1 M13 at UC Santa Barbara* 25-30, 30-27, 30-26, 30-27 W 3-1 F17 PACIFIC* 30-25, 30-25, 30-26 W 3-0 J11 CSUN (at UC Irvine Tny) 30-25, 30-18, 30-21 W 3-0 M27 at BYU* 30-27, 30-27, 28-30, 30-25 W 3-1 F24 at UC San Diego* 30-26, 30-22, 30-14 W 3-0 11 UC Irvine (at UC Irvine Tny) 30-21, 26-30, 18-30, 38-36, 15-17 L 2-3 M28 at BYU* 31-29, 32-34, 28-30, 25-30 L 1-3 F25 at Long Beach St.* 23-30, 30-32, 21-30 L 0-3 J15 UC SANTA CRUZ 30-16, 30-15, 30-12 W 3-0 A2 HAWAI’I* 30-27, 30-22, 24-30, 25-30, 15-13 W 3-2 M1 PEPPERDINE* 28-30, 28-30, 22-30 L 0-3 J17 UC IRVINE* 26-30, 30-27, 30-21, 27-30, 14-16 L 2-3 A3 HAWAI’I* 25-30, 31-29, 30-23, 30-22 W 3-1 M3 UC IRVINE* 29-31, 27-30, 25-30 L 0-3 J23 LONG BEACH ST.* 30-22, 29-31, 30-26, 17-30, 13-15 L 2-3 A8 PEPPERDINE* 33-35, 26-30, 31-33 L 0-3 M7 LOYOLA-CHICAGO 30-32, 30-27, 30-26, 28-30, 15-11 W 3-2 J25 UC SAN DIEGO* 30-28, 30-24, 28-30, 31-29 W 3-1 A10 USC* 33-31, 27-30, 22-30, 32-30, 19-17 W 3-2 M8 LEWIS 30-22, 30-25, 30-18 W 3-0 J31 at BYU* 27-30, 21-30, 26-30 L 0-3 A17 at Pacifi c* 30-26, 30-21, 30-21 W 3-0 M10 at Hawai’i* 25-30, 19-30, 30-28, 24-30 L 1-3 F1 at BYU* 32-34, 26-30, 15-30 L 0-3 A18 at Stanford* 23-30, 26-30, 28-30 L 0-3 M11 at Hawai’i* 24-30, 23-30, 28-30 L 0-3 F5 CSUN* 30-28, 28-30, 23-30, 30-25, 12-15 L 2-3 A25 at UC Irvine (MPSF Qfi nals) 23-30, 29-31, 32-30, 21-30 L 1-3 M16 at Pepperdine* 21-30, 29-31, 30-26, 25-30 L 1-3 F7 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-26, 31-29, 30-22 W 3-0 M17 USC* 30-32, 27-30, 30-27, 30-25, 15-7 W 3-2 F12 PEPPERDINE* 22-30, 30-26, 28-30, 35-37 L 1-3 M18 GEORGE MASON 30-27, 30-24, 30-28 W 3-0 F15 USC* (Kilgour Cup) 30-20, 30-20, 30-26 W 3-0 M31 LONG BEACH ST.* 30-21, 30-28, 30-28 W 3-0 F19 at UC Santa Barbara* 30-26, 30-28, 30-28 W 3-0 2008 (17-14, 12-10 MPSF: T4th Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 6) A1 UC SAN DIEGO* 28-30, 30-21, 30-21, 30-25 W 3-1 F21 at Pacifi c* 28-30, 32-30, 30-27, 30-24 W 3-1 J3 Ball St. (at Outrigger Tny) 30-23, 30-27, 26-30, 30-22 W 3-1 A7 at Stanford* 30-25, 30-20, 30-20 W 3-0 F22 at Stanford* 30-27, 30-19, 30-26 W 3-0 J4 Penn St. (at Outrigger Tny) 19-30, 26-30, 36-38 L 0-3 A8 at Pacifi c* 31-29, 31-29, 30-25 W 3-0 F26 LA VERNE 30-13, 30-18, 30-14 W 3-0 J5 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 24-30, 30-28, 24-30, 30-22,15-11 W 3-2 A12 at UC Santa Barbara* 30-23, 30-24, 34-32 W 3-0 F28 at Long Beach St.* 31-33, 31-29, 24-30, 24-30 L 1-3 J11 STANFORD* 30-19, 24-30, 30-24, 30-18 W 3-1 A14 at CSUN* 30-26, 17-30, 30-28, 30-20 W 3-1 M1 at UC San Diego* 37-35, 30-23, 30-26 W 3-0 J12 PACIFIC* 30-25, 30-21, 30-27 W 3-0 A19 UC SANTA BARBARA (MPSF play-in) 28-30, 31-29, 30-23, 30-15 W 3-1 M5 LEWIS 30-25, 26-30, 30-25, 25-30, 15-17 L 2-3 J17 UC SAN DIEGO* 30-21, 30-28, 30-26 W 3-0 A22 at Hawai’i (MPSF Qfi nals) 18-30, 30-28, 30-22, 30-24 W 3-1 M7 at UC Irvine* 30-27, 24-30, 30-19, 30-25 W 3-1 J18 LONG BEACH ST.* 27-30, 18-30, 30-24, 28-30 L 1-3 A27 PEPPERDINE (MPSF semis @UCI) 30-26, 30-28, 30-23 W 3-0 M12 CONCORDIA (NY) 30-20, 30-26, 30-18 W 3-0 J23 at USC* 26-30, 24-30, 30-23, 30-18, 16-18 L 2-3 A29 LONG BEACH ST. (MPSF champ. @UCI) 24-30, 30-28, 30-23, 30-24 W 3-1 M14 HAWAI’I* 30-22, 22-30, 24-30, 23-30 L 1-3 J25 at Pepperdine* 21-30, 30-20, 27-30, 30-28, 15-12 W 3-2 M4 IPFW (NCAA semis) 30-25, 30-23, 30-28 W 3-0 M15 HAWAI’I* 19-30, 23-30, 30-28, 19-30 L 1-3 J30 CAL BAPTIST 30-27, 26-30, 18-30, 30-21, 15-12 W 3-2 M6 Penn State (NCAA champ.) 30-27, 20-27, 30-27 W 3-0 M27 at CSUN* 26-30, 30-27, 32-34, 25-30 L 1-3 F1 UC IRVINE* 23-30, 30-25, 30-26, 31-29 W 3-1 A2 at USC* 30-28, 30-26, 27-30, 30-26 W 3-1 F6 USC* 24-30, 24-30, 24-30 L 0-3 A5 at Pepperdine* 27-30, 19-30, 23-30 L 0-3 F9 PEPPERDINE* 30-28, 30-24, 22-30, 30-26 W 3-1 2005 (26-6, 18-4 MPSF: 2nd Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 2) A11 STANFORD* 23-30, 26-30, 26-30 L 0-3 F14 at Hawai’i* 30-25, 26-30, 24-30, 30-26, 13-15 L 2-3 J7 UC Irvine (at UCSB Invit.) 30-21, 30-23, 30-22 W 3-0 A12 PACIFIC* 30-26, 30-27, 30-26 W 3-0 F15 at Hawai’i* 30-28, 30-24, 30-26 W 3-0 J7 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 30-23, 30-24, 30-26 W 3-0 F20 at UC Santa Barbara* 21-30, 29-31, 30-25, 24-30 L 1-3 J8 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 35-37, 30-25, 30-23, 23-30, 17-15 W 3-2 F22 at CSUN* 28-30, 31-29, 33-35, 28-30 L 1-3 J12 CAL BAPTIST 30-20, 28-30, 17-30, 30-27, 15-10 W 3-2 F29 at Ball State 30-23, 24-30, 19-30, 24-30 L 1-3

51 RECORDS

M17 at Hawai’i* 15-4, 12-15, 15-7,15-11 W 3-1 M7 STANFORD* 8-15,15-8,16-14,15-13 W 3-1 (25-7, 17-5 MPSF: T3rd Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 6) 2002 M18 at Hawai’i 15-8, 2-15, 15-7, 15-3 W 3-1 M8 PACIFIC*(w) 12-15,15-10,15-7,15-7 W 3-1 J11 at UC Irvine (at UCI Tny) 30-28, 30-25, 30-27 W 3-0 M31 at CSUN* 7-15, 15-3, 15-1, 15-12 W 3-1 M11 CAL STATE SAN BERNARDINO(mg) 15-2,15-3,12-15,15-4 W 3-1 J12 USC (at UCI Tny) 30-20, 30-22, 25-30, 30-19 W 3-1 A5 LMU* 7-15, 15-6, 10-15, 10-15 L 1-3 M13 LA VERNE (mg) 15-1,15-13,15-2 W 3-0 J12 Pepperdine (at UCI Tny) 27-30, 26-30, 27-30 L 0-3 A8 PEPPERDINE* 15-9, 12-15, 15-13, 16-14 W 3-1 M27 at BYU* 16-17,15-9,15-12,15-9 W 3-1 J17 Lewis (at Hawai’i Tny) 30-25, 23-30, 30-24, 30-24 W 3-1 A12 at Long Beach St.* 15-8, 3-15, 15-8, 12-15, 9-15 L 2-3 M28 at BYU* 15-9,4-15,10-15,15-10,18-16 W 3-2 J18 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 38-36, 30-20, 33-31 W 3-0 A14 UC IRVINE* 15-1, 15-8, 15-10 W 3-0 A2 LMU* 15-7,15-11,15-11 W 3-0 J19 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 31-29, 30-18, 30-26 W 3-0 A22 BYU (MPSF Qfi nals) 15-11, 15-6, 15-13 W 3-0 A4 PEPPERDINE* 7-15,15-10,15-10,15-10 W 3-1 J25 at Long Beach State* 30-26, 30-23, 30-22 W 3-0 A27 LMU (MPSF semis) 15-8, 15-11, 13-15, 15-12 W 3-1 A10 at CSUN* 15-12,15-10,15-7 W 3-0 J26 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 30-28, 30-21, 30-22 W 3-0 A29 at Pepperdine (MPSF playoffs) 6-15, 15-11, 15-4, 15-9 W 3-1 A12 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-11,13-15,10-15,15-9,19-17 W 3-2 J31 LONG BEACH ST.* 30-28, 25-30, 35-37, 30-21, 15-8 W 3-2 M4 Penn State (NCAA semis-at IPFW) 15-11, 15-8, 15-10 W 3-0 A15 at UC Irvine* 15-7,15-11,15-6 W 3-0 F1 at UC San Diego* 26-30, 30-21, 30-23, 30-17 W 3-1 M6 Ohio State (NCAA Champ.-at IPFW) 15-8, 15-10, 17-15 W 3-0 A19 PACIFIC (MPSF playoffs) 15-8,15-7,15-10 W 3-0 F7 PEPPERDINE* 30-28, 30-28, 28-30, 25-30, 17-15 W 3-2 A24 UC SANTA BARBARA (MPSF playoffs) 15-7,15-11,15-6 W 3-0 F9 USC* (Kilgour Cup) 30-23, 30-17, 30-23 W 3-0 A26 STANFORD (MPSF playoffs) 11-15,2-15,10-15 L 0-3 F15 at Pacifi c* 34-32, 29-31, 30-20, 30-26 W 3-1 1999 (20-7, 14-5 MPSF: 3rd Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 6) M1 Penn St. (NCAA semis-at Ohio St) 15-13,13-15,15-4,10-15,15-10 W 3-2 F16 at Stanford* 31-29, 24-30, 29-31, 25-30 L 1-3 J13 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-2,15-6,15-11 W 3-0 M3 Stanford (NCAA Champ.-at Ohio St) 7-15,10-15,15-9,15-6,13-15 L 2-3 F19 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-26, 30-24, 25-30, 35-33 W 3-1 J20 Penn State (at Outrigger Tny) 15-3,15-3,15-10 W 3-0 F21 BYU* 25-30, 31-29, 30-26, 30-23 W 3-1 J21 Lewis (at Outrigger Tny) 13-15,15-7,315,15-7,9-15 L 2-3 F23 BYU* 30-28, 28-30, 29-31, 33-31, 12-15 L 2-3 J22 at Hawai’i (at Outrigger Tny) 15-6,15-7,15-3 W 3-0 F27 at CSUN* 30-25, 30-28, 30-23 W 3-0 J27 PEPPERDINE* 13-15,11-15,15-5,15-4,11-15 L 2-3 1996 (26-5, 15-4 NCAA Champions; M1 at UC Santa Barbara* 30-26, 29-31, 30-23, 30-23 W 3-1 J30 LMU*(wc) 15-9,15-5,9-15,14-16,17-15 W 3-2 MPSF:1st Place Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) M6 LEWIS 30-21, 34-32, 30-25 W 3-0 F3 CSUN* 15-3,15-9,15-4 W 3-0 M8 PACIFIC* 33-31, 30-22, 31-29 W 3-0 J20 at UC Santa Barbara (Invit.) 15-7,15-5,14-16,17-16 W 3-1 F5 at UC Irvine* 13-15,15-12,15-3,15-9 W 3-1 J25 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-5,10-15,15-4,15-12 W 3-1 M9 STANFORD* 32-30, 30-21, 30-24 W 3-0 F10 at USC* 15-5,15-10,15-10 W 3-0 M12 CONCORDIA (NY) 30-26, 30-26, 28-30, 31-29 W 3-1 J26 Ball State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-4,15-5,15-5 W 3-0 F12 at San Diego State* 15-5,15-8,15-5 W 3-0 J27 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 14-16,15-12,15-8,8-15,14-16 L 2-3 M15 UC IRVINE* 30-20, 30-22, 29-31, 28-30, 15-11 W 3-2 F13 at UC San Diego* 15-13,15-9,15-4 W 3-0 M16 GEORGE MASON 30-22, 30-25, 30-22 W 3-0 J30 at CSUN* 15-2,15-12,15-9 W 3-0 F17 at CSUN* 15-2,15-6,15-3 W 3-0 F3 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-10,8-15,13-15,13-15 L 1-3 M27 at USC* (Lyon Center) 30-24, 30-24, 30-24 W 3-0 F19 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-7,14-16,15-11,15-3 W 3-1 M30 at Pepperdine* 27-30, 27-30, 23-30 L 0-3 F9 SAN DIEGO STATE*(wc) 15-5,15-10,15-3 W 3-0 F24 UC IRVINE* 12-15,15-9,15-4,13-15,13-15 L 2-3 F10 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 5-15,15-2,15-4,15-3 W 3-1 A5 at Hawai’i* 30-19, 26-30, 16-30, 25-30 L 1-3 F26 at BYU* 11-15,0-15,13-15 L 0-3 A6 at Hawai’i* 19-30, 20-30, 20-30 L 0-3 F14 PEPPERDINE* (Kilgour Cup) 15-5,15-13,15-9 W 3-0 F27 at BYU* 11-15,8-15,12-15 L 0-3 F16 LMU* (wc) 15-13,15-4,9-15,15-6 W 3-1 A10 CSUN* 30-26, 30-13, 38-36 W 3-0 M3 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-12,10-15,15-7,13-15,15-17 L 2-3 A12 UC IRVINE* 30-26, 30-26, 33-35, 30-22 W 3-1 F23 at Stanford* 15-9,15-11,15-9 W 3-0 M5 PACIFIC* (wc) 15-2,9-15,15-13,10-15,15-12 W 3-2 A20 UC SANTA BARBARA (MPSF Qfi nals) 30-28, 30-27, 28-30, 30-32, 8-15 L 2-3 F24 at Pacifi c* 15-7,15-6,16-14 W 3-0 M6 UC SANTA CRUZ (wc) 15-2,15-2,15-10 W 3-0 F27 at UC Irvine* 16-14,15-12,17-16 W 3-0 M9 LEWIS 9-15,15-13,15-7,15-9 W 3-1 M1 at Hawai’i* 15-10,4-15,11-15,13-15 L 1-3 M11 CONCORDIA (at Puerto Rico) 15-3, 15-9,15-8 W 3-0 2001 (24-8, 12-5 MPSF: 2nd Place Mtn Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 2) M2 at Hawai’i* 15-12,16-14,6-15,5-15,15-13 W 3-2 M12 at American Univ.-Puerto Rico 15-0,15-0,15-1 W 3-0 M7 at Pepperdine* 15-7,15-7,15-7 W 3-0 J6 at UC Santa Barb. (at UCSB Tny) 30-27, 30-20, 28-30, 26-30, 13-15 L 2-3 A2 HAWAI’I* 15-12,15-8,15-11 W 3-0 J12 Pepperdine (at UC Irvine Tny) 26-30, 30-24, 30-26, 27-30, 7-15 L 2-3 M8 Lewis (mg) 15-9,15-4,16-14 W 3-0 A8 at Pepperdine* 13-15,16-17,15-11,15-9,15-13 W 3-2 M12 BYU* 15-2,15-10,15-10 W 3-0 J13 CSUN (at UC Irvine Tny) 30-23, 29-31, 30-23, 30-24 W 3-1 A9 at LMU* 8-15,11-15,15-8,15-2,15-12 W 3-2 J13 at UC Irvine (at UC Irvine Tny) 30-27, 30-28, 30-26 W 3-0 M13 BYU* 11-15,9-15,15-11,15-11,15-11 W 3-2 A16 STANFORD* (Kilgour Cup) 15-3,15-3,15-9 W 3-0 J18 Penn St. (at Hawai’i Tny) 30-27, 30-28, 24-30, 19-30, 15-5 W 3-2 M29 USC* 15-8,15-11,15-12 W 3-0 A27 at Hawai’i (MPSF playoffs) 14-16,11-15,16-14,15-17 L 1-3 J19 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 31-29, 20-30, 30-27, 42-44, 15-9 W 3-2 A3 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-13,8-15,8-15,5-15 L 1-3 J26 LONG BEACH ST.* 28-30, 35-33, 30-28, 19-30, 6-15 L 2-3 A5 CSUN* 15-1,15-13,15-6 W 3-0 A6 USC* 15-10,15-11,15-10 W 3-0 J31 CAL BAPTIST 30-26, 30-21, 30-28 W 3-0 1998 (28-4, 17-2 NCAA Champions; F3 at Pepperdine* 25-30, 32-30, 30-28, 30-26 W 3-1 A10 at LMU* 15-3,15-9,15-0 W 3-0 F7 USC* 27-30, 30-24, 30-26, 30-19 W 3-1 MPSF: 1st Place Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) A12 at Long Beach State* 10-15,10-15,13-15 L 0-3 F14 CSUN* 30-20, 30-19, 30-22 W 3-0 J7 Ball State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-2, 15-4, 15-8 W 3-0 A16 UC IRVINE* 15-3,15-1,15-7 W 3-0 F16 UC SANTA BARBARA* 30-20, 30-32, 30-23, 22-30, 15-12 W 3-2 J8 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-3, 15-5, 15-8 W 3-0 A20 PACIFIC (MPSF playoffs) 15-4,15-13,15-2 W 3-0 F21 at UC Irvine* 26-30, 30-13, 30-25, 30-20 W 3-1 J10 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-11, 15-6, 15-10 W 3-0 A26 CSUN (MPSF playoffs-Hawai’i) 15-12,10-15,15-9,15-9 W 3-1 F23 at BYU 22-30, 30-28, 26-30, 22-30 L 1-3 J15 at LMU* 15-9, 15-12, 15-12 W 3-0 A27 UC Santa Barbara(MPSF playoffs-Hawai’i) 15-10,8-15,15-11,14-16,15-13 W 3-2 M2 UC SANTA CRUZ 30-17, 30-21, 30-23 W 3-0 J23 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-13, 15-9, 15-10 W 3-0 M2 LEWIS (NCAA semis- at UCLA) 15-7, 15-8,15-10 W 3-0 M3 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 31-29, 33-31, 30-28 W 3-0 J29 at Pepperdine* 15-13, 13-15, 4-15, 17-16, 15-12 W 3-2 M6 HAWAI’I (NCAA Champ.-at UCLA) 15-13,12-15,9-15,17-15,15-12 W 3-2 M7 at USC* 34-32, 33-31, 30-17 W 3-0 F4 USC* (Kilgour Cup) 13-15, 15-3, 15-9, 15-9 W 3-1 M9 STANFORD* (Kilgour Cup) 28-30, 27-30, 30-28, 30-27, 16-18 L 2-3 F7 at Long Beach State* 15-11, 15-11, 15-8 W 3-0 M10 PACIFIC* 30-21, 30-21, 30-18 W 3-0 F13 SAN DIEGO STATE* 15-13, 15-2, 15-5 W 3-0 1995 (31-1, 19-0 NCAA Champions; M12 CONCORDIA (NY) 30-28, 30-21, 30-18 W 3-0 F14 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 15-5, 15-13, 15-6 W 3-0 MPSF:1st Place Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) M14 RUTGERS-NEWARK 30-23, 30-20, 30-26 W 3-0 F18 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-6, 15-9, 15-4 W 3-0 J21 at UC Santa Barbara (UCSB Invit.) 15-13,15-8,15-13 W 3-0 M17 at Long Beach St.* 30-28, 30-28, 27-30, 30-28 W 3-1 F20 CAL STATE SAN BERNARDINO (wc) 15-0, 15-5, 15-4 W 3-0 J25 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-9,15-11,15-10 W 3-0 M29 HAWAI’I* 30-25, 27-30,30-23, 23-30, 13-15 L 2-3 F21 CSUN* (wc) 15-6, 15-3, 15-3 W 3-0 J26 at Hawai’i (Hawai’i Tny) 15-9,15-11,16-14 W 3-0 M30 HAWAI’I* 30-25, 30-27, 20-30, 30-27 W 3-1 F26 UC IRVINE* 15-5, 15-7, 15-6 W 3-0 F1 LMU* 15-4,15-8,15-7 W 3-0 A6 at UC San Diego* 26-30, 30-26, 30-22, 30-18 W 3-1 F28 LEWIS 15-8, 15-4, 14-16, 15-4 W 3-1 F3 PEPPERDINE* (Kilgour Cup) 15-4,15-4,15-10 W 3-0 A13 at Stanford* 28-30, 28-30, 24-30 L 0-3 M3 LOYOLA-CHICAGO 15-6, 15-4, 15-9 W 3-0 F8 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-12,14-16,15-13,15-9 W 3-1 A14 at Pacifi c* 30-22, 30-22, 30-27 W 3-0 M6 BYU* 12-15, 10-15, 8-15 L 0-3 F10 at CSUN* 15-4,15-9,15-7 W 3-0 A21 STANFORD (MPSF Qfi nals) 27-30, 30-23, 30-22, 27-30, 20-18 W 3-2 M7 BYU* 15-5, 15-11, 15-13 W 3-0 F15 at USC (Lyon Center) 15-2,15-12,15-11 W 3-0 A26 Long Beach St. (MPSF semis-at BYU) 27-30, 30-25, 30-24, 23-30, 15-7 W 3-2 M13 at Stanford* 11-15, 12-15, 9-15 L 0-3 F17 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-12,15-4,15-6 W 3-0 A28 Hawai’i (MPSF champ.-at BYU) 30-27, 30-23, 15-30, 30-27 W 3-1 M14 at Pacifi c* 15-12, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-0 F22 UC IRVINE* 15-7,15-5,15-6 W 3-0 M3 Ohio St. (NCAA semis-at Long Beach St.) 30-21, 30-20, 22-30, 30-24 W 3-1 M17 RUTGERS 15-3, 15-2, 15-6 W 3-0 F24 at BYU* 15-12,15-7,15-3 W 3-0 M5 BYU (NCAA Champ.-at Long Beach St.) 26-30, 26-30, 30-32 L 0-3 M20 at Hawai’i* 15-9, 15-13, 11-15, 15-8 W 3-1 F25 at BYU* 15-6,15-5,10-15,15-17,15-6 W 3-2 M21 at Hawai’i* 6-15, 12-15, 13-15 L 0-3 M3 Ball State (at Springfi eld Col. Tny) 5-15,12-15,11-15 L 0-3 A3 at CSUN* 15-9, 15-6, 15-8 W 3-0 M4 at Springfi eld College(Tny) 15-7,15-6,15-4 W 3-0 2000 (29-5, 14-5 NCAA Champions; A7 LMU* 15-11, 15-5, 13-15, 15-5 W 3-1 M8 HAWAI’I* 15-11,15-5,13-15,12-15,15-9 W 3-2 A10 PEPPERDINE* 9-15, 15-10, 15-9, 15-5 W 3-1 M10 STANFORD* (wc) 15-7,15-9,15-10 W 3-0 MPSF:2nd Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) A14 at UC Irvine* 15-12, 15-11, 12-15, 15-4 W 3-1 J7 Long Beach St. (at UC Irvine Tny) 11-15, 15-10, 15-12, 13-15, 15-12 W 3-2 M11 PACIFIC* (wc) 15-4,15-3,15-10 W 3-0 A18 LMU (wc-MPSF playoffs) 15-10, 15-8, 15-2 W 3-0 J8 Pacifi c(at UC Irvine Tny) 15-4, 15-10, 15-5 W 3-0 M13 LEWIS (wc) 15-2,15-2,15-1 W 3-0 A23 LONG BEACH ST. (MPSF playoffs) 15-12, 15-9, 15-10 W 3-0 J8 at UC Irvine (at UC Irvine Tny) 15-6, 15-6, 15-7 W 3-0 M16 La VERVE (mg) 15-4,15-7,15-8 W 3-0 A25 PEPPERDINE (MPSF playoffs) 12-15, 15-11, 4-15, 12-15 L 1-3 J21 at Pacifi c* 15-5, 15-2, 15-9 W 3-0 M29 at LMU* 15-11,15-13,15-2 W 3-0 A30 Lewis (NCAA semis- at Hawai’i) 13-15, 15-9, 15-6, 13-15, 15-11 W 3-2 J22 at Stanford* 15-11, 15-9, 15-11 W 3-0 A1 at Pepperdine* 15-4,15-6,15-8 W 3-0 M2 Pepperdine (NCAA Champ.-at Hawai’i) 15-11, 15-11, 15-7 W 3-0 J26 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-4, 15-3, 11-15, 15-2 W 3-1 A7 CSUN* (UCLA Tny) 15-4,15-5,17-16 W 3-0 J27 IPFW (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-2, 15-11, 12-15, 15-4 W 3-1 A8 LONG BEACH ST. (UCLA Tny) 12-15,15-10,15-10,15-11 W 3-1 J28 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 6-15, 15-13, 15-12, 13-15, 17-16 W 3-2 A12 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-6,15-10,15-5 W 3-0 1997 (24-5, 17-2 MPSF: 1st Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 2) A14 at San Diego State* 15-9,15-7,15-4 W 3-0 F2 at LMU* 15-4, 15-13, 15-13 W 3-0 J23 Penn State (at Hawai’i Tny) 11-15,11-15,16-14,5-15 L 1-3 F4 USC* (Kilgour Cup) 15-13, 10-15, 15-6, 6-15, 11-15 L 2-3 A15 at UC San Diego* 15-2,15-12,12-15,15-4 W 3-1 J25 at Hawai’i (at Hawai’i Tny) 15-11,13-15,16-14,15-5 W 3-1 A18 at UC Irvine* 15-11,15-5,17-15 W 3-0 F10 at Pepperdine* 16-17, 16-17, 15-11, 15-8, 10-15 L 2-3 J29 CSUN* 15-0, 15-6, 15-4 W 3-0 F11 UC SAN DIEGO* (wc) 15-12, 15-1, 15-0 W 3-0 A22 USC (MPSF playoffs) 15-13,15-13,15-11 W 3-0 J31 UC SANTA BARBARA*(wc) 15-11,10-15,15-6,16-17,13-15 L 2-3 F16 SAN DIEGO STATE* 15-4, 15-7, 15-12 W 3-0 A28 BYU (MPSF playoffs) 15-3,15-4,15-5 W 3-0 F7 at San Diego State* 15-8,15-6,15-8 W 3-0 A29 HAWAI’I (MPSF playoffs) 12-15,15-13,15-7,15-5 W 3-1 F17 CSUN* (wc) 9-15, 13-15, 15-10, 14-16 L 1-3 F8 at UC SanDiego* 15-11,9-15,15-7,15-12 W 3-1 F19 UC SANTA BARBARA*(wc) 17-16, 13-15, 15-11, 10-15, 15-10 W 3-2 M5 Ball St. (NCAA semis-at Springfi eld, MA) 15-12,15-9,15-10 W 3-0 F11 at LMU* 15-8,15-7,14-16,15-5 W 3-1 M6 Penn St. (NCAA Champ.-at Springfi eld, MA) 15-3,15-10,15-10 W 3-0 F26 at UC Irvine* 15-12, 15-8, 10-15, 15-3 W 3-1 F13 at Pepperdine* 10-15,5-15,11-15 L 0-3 M1 BYU* 15-10, 15-10, 12-15, 16-14 W 3-1 F19 at USC* 15-9,4-15,15-5,15-6 W 3-1 M2 BYU* 2-15, 15-12, 15-8, 15-7 W 3-1 F21 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-7,15-10,15-12 W 3-0 M4 LEWIS 12-15, 15-9, 15-1, 15-4 W 3-1 F26 UC IRVINE* 15-7,15-6,15-7 W 3-0 M8 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-11, 15-7, 15-10 W 3-0 F28 HAWAI’I* (Kilgour Cup) 15-12,15-12,15-11 W 3-0 M10 BALL STATE 15-9, 15-5, 15-9 W 3-0 M4 LEWIS 15-9,6-15,15-8,14-16,24-22 W 3-2 M11 CONCORDIA 15-3, 15-9, 15-3 W 3-0

52 RECORDS

1994 (27-2, 19-0 MPSF: 1st Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) 1991 (16-9, 12-4 WIVA: 1st DeGroot Div.; Coach Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 6) J15 BYU (UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 12-15, 15-8, 3-15, 12-15 L 2-3 J22 at Pepperdine* 15-13,15-7, 15-9 W 3-0 J21 Ohio State (at IPFW Tny) 15-8,13-15, 15-3, 15-9 W 3-1 J26 LONG BEACH ST. (Kilgour Cup)(wc) 13-15, 7-15, 10-15 L 0-3 1988 (28-10, 11-7 WIVA: 4th Place; Coach: Al Scates; FInal AVCA Rank: 5) J22 at IPFW (IPFW Tny) 15-11,10-15, 15-9, 17-15 W 3-1 J30 CSUN* 8-15, 15-8, 15-8, 15-8 W 3-1 J16 UC Davis (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 11-6, 11-5 W 2-0 J28 BYU* (wc) 15-4, 15-4, 15-6 W 3-0 F1 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-2, 13-15,11-15, 15-8, 15-13 W 3-2 J16 UC Irvine (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 11-2, 11-3 W 2-0 J29 BYU* (wc) 15-7,15-8,15-5 W 3-0 F7 at Penn State 8-15, 10-15, 16-14, 10-15 L 1-3 J16 UC Riverside (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 11-2, 11-5 W 2-0 F3 at LMU* 15-4, 15-4, 15-6 W 3-0 F9 at Penn State 5-15, 14-16, 12-15 L 0-3 J16 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 11-15, 15-11, 15-6 W 2-1 F5 UC SANTA BARBARA* (wc) 15-5,15-5, 15-12 W 3-0 F12 UC IRVINE* 15-12, 15-9, 15-2 W 3-0 J16 UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 11-5, 11-5 W 2-0 F11 PEPPERDINE* (Kilgour Cup) 15-11, 15-4, 9-15, 15-3 W 3-1 F14 at USC* 12-15, 10-15, 12-15 L 0-3 J16 UC San Francisco (All-Cal Tny at UC Santa Cruz) 13-15, 15-6, 15-5 W 2-1 F19 at UC Irvine* 15-3, 15-4, 15-11 W 3-0 F22 LMU*(w) 13-15, 17-15, 15-11, 15-11 W 3-1 J20 PEPPERDINE (Kilgour Cup) 15-5, 10-15, 18-16, 15-12 W 3-1 F23 at Pepperdine* 15-4, 10-15, 15-6, 15-3 W 3-1 M2 at Stanford* 15-9, 15-12, 11-15, 11-15, 15-12 W 3-2 J22 Chico State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-2, 15-7 W 2-0 M1 SAN DIEGO STATE* 17-15, 15-13, 15-6 W 3-0 M7 PEPPERDINE* 15-9, 15-13, 15-5 W 3-0 J22 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 12-15, 15-10, 15-8 W 2-1 M3 at CSUN* 15-12, 17-15, 15-4 W 3-0 M8 SAN DIEGO STATE* (wc) 12-15, 10-15, 13-15 L 0-3 J22 LMU (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-9 W 2-0 M5 IPFW (wc) 15-5, 15-9, 15-5 W 3-0 M10 GEORGE MASON (wc) 15-4, 15-4, 15-5 W 3-0 J23 San Diego State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-12, 5-15, 15-7 W 2-1 M10 at Pacifi c* 15-11, 15-3, 15-10 W 3-0 M15 LONG BEACH ST.* 10-15, 8-15, 8-15 L 0-3 J23 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 9-15, 15-3, 15-9 W 2-1 M11 at Stanford* 15-12, 15-11, 15-6 W 3-0 M16 at CSUN* 14-16, 11-15, 17-16, 11-15 L 1-3 J29 STANFORD* 15-4, 12-15, 15-10, 15-10 W 3-1 M13 BALL STATE (wc) 15-8, 15-3, 15-11 W 3-0 M30 HAWAI’I* (wc) 15-7, 15-12, 15-3 W 3-0 F3 UC SANTA BARBARA* 11-15, 15-17, 15-10, 15-10, 9-15 L 2-3 M16 at Long Beach St.* 14-16, 15-13, 15-10, 15-5 W 3-1 A5 UC SANTA BARBARA (UCLA Tny) 15-7, 15-12, 15-5 W 3-0 F5 at George Mason 10-15, 15-12, 15-11, 15-5 W 3-1 M18 USC* 15-5, 15-11, 15-6 W 3-0 A6 USC (UCLA Tny) 10-15, 17-16, 15-6, 15-9 W 3-1 10 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-9, 15-8, 15-3 W 3-0 A2 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-8, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-0 A12 at BYU* 15-5, 15-8, 17-15 W 3-0 F16 at Pepperdine* 5-15, 15-11, 8-15, 14-16 L 1-3 A5 UC SAN DIEGO* 15-9, 15-2, 14-16, 15-7 W 3-1 A13 at BYU* 15-4, 15-9, 15-8 W 3-0 F18 at LMU* 6-15, 15-11, 7-15, 15-11, 15-9 W 3-2 A6 LMU* 15-12, 15-7, 15-13 W 3-0 A17 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-4, 15-11, 15-11 W 3-0 F24 at CSUN* 7-15, 15-6, 15-12, 10-15, 15-10 W 3-2 A8 CSUN* (UCLA Tny) 15-10, 15-3, 15-4 W 3-0 A19 UC IRVINE* 15-5, 15-9, 15-9 W 3-0 F26 PEPPERDINE (UCLA Tny) 5-15, 15-13, 15-13, 14-16, 15-8 W 3-2 A9 USC (UCLA Tny) 12-15, 15-11, 15-8, 15-8 W 3-1 A24 USC (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 15-13, 5-15, 6-15, 15-9, 10-15 L 2-3 F27 USC (UCLA Tny) 12-15, 7-15, 3-15 L 0-3 A14 at Hawai’i* 15-13, 15-17, 15-5, 15-10 W 3-1 A25 CSUN (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 15-11, 13-15, 15-3, 16-14 W 3-1 M2 USC* 11-15, 10-15, 11-15 L 0-3 A15 at Hawai’i 15-8, 13-15, 15-6, 8-15, 15-9 W 3-2 A27 Long Beach St. (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 15-4, 17-16, 11-15, 0-15, 10-15 L 2-3 M4 at Stanford* 11-15, 15-12, 15-10, 15-10 W 3-1 A18 UC IRVINE* (wc) 15-4, 15-2, 15-4 W 3-0 M5 at UC Davis 15-11, 15-5, 15-11 W 3-0 A23 at Stanford (MPSF playoffs) 15-5, 15-4, 15-7 W 3-0 M9 LMU* 15-17, 15-8, 16-14, 15-6 W 3-1 M6 at IPFW (NCAA semis-at IPFW) 15-3, 15-8, 15-4 W 3-0 1990 (23-5, 13-3 WIVA: 1st DeGroot Div.; Coach Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 3) M11 at UC Irvine 15-0, 15-4, 15-4 W 3-0 M7 Penn St. (NCAA Champ.-at IPFW) 15-9, 13-15, 15-4, 12-15, 12-15 L 2-3 J19 HAWAI’I (Kilgour Cup) 8-15, 16-14, 15-11, 15-12 W 3-1 M12 at San Diego State* 18-16, 13-15, 15-10, 15-8 W 3-1 J20 CSUN (UCLA Tny) (wc) 14-16, 15-7, 15-13, 15-7 W 3-1 M23 at Hawai’i* 15-7, 16-18, 4-15, 12-15 L 1-3 J24 at CSUN* 13-15, 15-12, 15-6, 7-15, 15-11 W 3-2 M25 at Hawai’i* 15-12, 9-15, 12-15, 10-15 L 1-3 J28 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 12-15, 15-4, 15-5, 15-7 W 3-1 M30 PEPPERDINE* 6-15, 15-9, 15-4, 15-4 W 3-1 1993 (24-3, 16-3 NCAA Champions; J31 UC IRVINE* 15-3, 15-9, 15-6 W 3-0 A1 USC (at UCSB Tny) 15-7, 9-15, 6-15, 6-15 L 1-3 MPSF: 1st Place Mountain Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) F3 at LMU* 15-11, 15-6, 15-7 W 3-0 A2 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Tny) 17-15, 15-7 W 2-0 J14 UC SANTA CRUZ (mg) 15-5,15-2,15-3 W 3-0 F7 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-4, 15-10, 15-17, 17-15 W 3-1 A6 at USC* 7-15, 3-15, 12-15 L 0-3 J16 at UC Santa Barbara (Invit.) 15-4,15-10,15-7 W 3-0 F9 Ball St. (at American U. Tny) 10-15, 15-13, 15-5, 15-10 W 3-1 A9 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-10, 10-15, 12-15, 13-15 L 1-3 (wc) J22 LONG BEACH ST. (Kilgour Cup) 15-8,15-5,15-10 W 3-0 F11 George Mason (at American U. Tny) 15-3, 15-8, 12-15, 17-16 W 3-1 A15 CSUN* 15-11, 16-14, 15-4 W 3-0 J30 LMU*(wc) 15-12, 15-4, 15-8 W 3-0 F14 at Long Beach St.* 16-17, 6-15, 16-14, 12-15 L 1-3 A16 SAN DIEGO STATE* (wc) 15-1, 10-15, 15-6, 15-11 W 3-1 F5 PEPPERDINE* (wc) 15-9, 15-11, 15-6 W 3-0 F17 at BYU* 15-3, 15-2, 15-10 W 3-0 A20 at Long Beach St.* 15-10, 12-15, 4-15, 15-12, 15-10 W 3-2 F10 at CSUN* 15-3, 15-10, 15-5 W 3-0 F21 PEPPERDINE* 15-11, 4-15, 10-15, 15-13, 15-9 W 3-2 A28 UC Santa Barbara (NCAA reg. at UC Irvine) 11-15, 13-15, 11-15 L 0-3 F12 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-6, 15-5, 16-14 W 3-0 F23 CSUN* (wc) 8-15, 15-12, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-1 F25 at Pepperdine* 12-15, 16-14, 13-15, 0-15 L 1-3 F28 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-10, 15-10, 15-13 W 3-0 F26 UC IRVINE* (wc) 15-1, 15-6, 15-4 W 3-0 M2 USC* 15-10, 6-15, 1-15, 11-15 L 1-3 1987 (38-3, 18-0 NCAA Champions; F27 at UC San Diego* 15-7, 15-7, 15-7 W 3-0 M7 STANFORD* 2-15, 15-17, 15-7, 15-9, 15-12 W 3-2 WIVA:1st Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) F28 at San Diego State* 15-5, 15-9, 15-10 W 3-0 M9 BYU* (wc) 15-9, 15-10, 15-8 W 3-0 J16 USC (Kilgour Cup) 15-10, 15-13, 15-13 W 3-0 M5 HAWAII* (UCLA Tny) 15-3, 15-5, 15-5 W 3-0 M11 BALL ST. (wc) 15-12, 15-12, 15-6 W 3-0 J19 California (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-8, 15-7 W 2-0 M7 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-4, 15-9, 15-6 W 3-0 M14 at UC Irvine* 15-6, 15-6, 15-4 W 3-0 J19 UC Davis (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-3, 15-4 W 2-0 M9 NAVY 15-4, 15-3, 15-3 W 3-0 M19 at San Diego State* 15-7, 15-6, 11-15, 15-5 W 3-1 J19 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 8-15, 13-15 L 0-2 M12 STANFORD* 15-5, 15-11, 13-15, 6-15, 13-15 L 2-3 A4 at Pepperdine* 15-17, 15-13, 15-12, 15-13 W 3-1 J19 UC Santa Cruz (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-2, 15-0 W 2-0 M13 PACIFIC* 15-4, 15-5, 15-5 W 3-0 A6 UC SANTA BARBARA (UCLA Tny) 15-2, 15-6, 13-15, 15-6 W 3-1 J19 at UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-5, 15-6 W 2-0 M17 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-4, 10-15, 14-16, 15-10, 15-13 W 3-2 A8 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11, 13-15, 12-15, 11-15 L 1-3 J23 Calgary (Exhibition) 15-2, 15-7, 15-2 W 3-0 M19 at USC* 15-10, 15-7, 15-6 W 3-0 A12 at Hawai’i* 11-15, 6-15, 15-10, 3-15 L 1-3 J23 Arizona (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-7 W 2-0 A3 CSUN* 15-11, 15-11, 15-7 W 3-0 A13 at Hawai’i 15-13, 15-7, 13-15, 13-15, 17-16 W 3-2 J23 Calgary (at UCSB Invit.) 15-3, 15-9 W 2-0 A9 at BYU* 15-5, 12-15, 11-15, 15-8, 11-15 L 2-3 A19 at CSUN (playoffs) 15-11, 15-6, 15-7 W 3-0 J23 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 15-3, 15-9 W 2-0 A12 at BYU* 15-7, 15-6, 15-4 W 3-0 A26 Stanford (playoffs-at CSUN) 15-11, 15-9, 15-9 W 3-0 J23 UC Davis (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9, 15-11 W 2-0 A15 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-6, 5-15, 15-3, 15-7 W 3-1 A28 Long Beach St. (playoffs-at CSUN) 10-15, 15-11, 15-3, 8-15, 9-15 L 2-3 J23 UC San Diego (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-9 W 2-0 A17 at UC Irvine* 15-3, 15-9, 15-10 W 3-0 J24 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 12-15, 15-9, 4-15 L 1-2 A21 at LMU* 15-5, 15-3, 15-7 W 3-0 J24 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 13-15, 15-5, 10-15 L 1-2 A28 Stanford (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 15-4, 15-7, 15-13 W 3-0 1989 (29-5, 17-3 NCAA Champions; J24 USC (at UCSB Invit.) 15-6, 15-11 W 2-0 M7 Ohio State (NCAA semis-UCLA) 15-4, 15-4, 15-2 W 3-0 WIVA:T1st Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 1) J28 at Long Beach St.* 15-7, 15-7, 15-11 W 3-0 M8 CSUN (NCAA Champ.-UCLA) 15-8, 15-11, 15-10 W 3-0 J13 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 8-15, 15-10 W 2-1 F4 at LMU* 15-11, 15-0, 15-11 W 3-0 J13 UC Irvine (at UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 15-7 W 2-0 F6 STANFORD (UCLA Tny) 15-8, 15-11, 15-4 W 3-0 J13 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 17-15, 15-12 W 2-0 F7 USC (UCLA Tny) 13-15, 15-7, 15-3, 15-5 W 3-1 1992 (17-7, 11-5 WIVA: 2nd DeGroot Div.; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 5) J14 LMU (at UCSB Invit.) 15-7, 15-11 W 2-0 F12 at UC Santa Barbara* 9-15, 15-11, 13-15, 16-14, 15-13 W 3-2 J11 UC SAN DIEGO (wc) 15-6,15-2,15-6 W 3-0 J14 Pepperdine (at UCSB Invit.) 8-15, 15-8, 12-15 L 1-2 F15 HAWAI’I* (wc) 15-2, 15-5, 15-8 W 3-0 J17 LONG BEACH ST. (Kligour Cup) 14-16, 16-14, 7-15, 10-15 L 1-3 J20 PEPPERDINE (Kilgour Cup) 15-11, 17-15, 15-4 W 3-0 F18 STANFORD* 15-7, 15-8, 15-7 W 3-0 J22 BYU* 15-12, 15-8, 15-9 W 3-0 J25 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-12, 6-15, 15-13, 15-0 W 3-1 F20 at UC Irvine 15-3, 15-1, 15-2 W 3-0 J25 BYU (at UCSB Invit.) 16-17, 15-6, 15-4, 15-12 W 3-1 J31 at Pepperdine* 15-6, 16-14, 15-13 W 3-0 F21 at San Diego State* 15-9, 15-3, 15-5 W 3-0 J31 at LMU* 15-3, 15-4, 15-2 W 3-0 F4 at USC* 15-12, 15-13, 15-3 W 3-0 F25 CSUN* 15-2, 15-4, 14-16, 15-1 W 3-1 F4 at Pepperdine* 10-15, 15-12, 15-17, 15-12, 8-15 L 2-3 F7 SAN DIEGO STATE* 15-2, 13-15, 15-3, 15-5 W 3-1 F27 PEPPERDINE* 11-15, 15-10, 15-13, 15-13 W 3-1 F7 STANFORD* 15-13, 7-15, 15-9, 7-15, 15-17 L 2-3 F10 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-17, 10-15, 8-15 L 0-3 F28 PENN STATE 15-6, 15-7, 15-10 W 3-0 F14 UC IRVINE* (wc) 15-3, 15-7, 15-5 W 3-0 F14 UC IRVINE* 15-0, 15-8, 15-12 W 3-0 M6 at USC* 15-7, 11-15, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-1 F21 CSUN* (wc) 10-15, 15-6, 13-15, 13-15 L 1-3 F17 HAWAI’I*(wc) 15-10, 11-15, 15-2, 11-15, 15-11 W 3-2 M11 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-6, 15-5, 15-7 W 3-0 F26 UC SANTA BARBARA* 6-15, 15-10, 15-12, 15-5 W 3-1 F21 HAWAI’I* 9-15, 15-6, 16-14, 6-15, 15-13 W 3-2 M12 at Pepperdine* 15-11, 15-12, 16-18, 9-15, 15-10 W 3-2 F29 at UC Santa Barbara* 12-15, 15-12, 9-15, 10-15 L 1-3 F25 at Long Beach St.* 15-10, 8-15, 15-11, 15-9 W 3-1 M26 HAWAI’I* 13-15, 15-7, 15-8, 6-15, 15-7 W 3-2 M4 USC* 4-15, 15-5, 16-14, 15-11 W 3-1 F28 CSUN* 19-17, 15-7, 16-14 W 3-0 M28 at CSUN* 15-10, 15-9, 15-3 W 3-0 M6 PEPPERDINE* 15-9, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-0 M3 at San Diego State* 15-2, 15-6, 15-6 W 3-0 M31 LMU* 15-7, 15-4, 15-10 W 3-0 M10 at Long Beach St.* 13-15, 9-15, 15-12, 4-15 L 1-3 M4 PENN ST.*(UCLA Tny) 11-15, 15-7, 15-9, 13-15, 15-7 W 3-2 A1 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-8, 15-5, 15-7 W 3-0 M13 BYU* 15-3, 15-4, 15-11 W 3-0 M5 USC 14-16, 11-15, 17-15, 15-6, 11-15 L 2-3 A3 USC (at UCSB Tny) 15-9, 5-15, 15-9, 15-11 W 3-1 M27 at San Diego State* 15-6, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-0 M8 at UC Irvine* 15-1, 15-4, 15-13 W 3-0 A4 PENN STATE (at UCSB Tny) 15-6, 15-9, 12-15, 15-10 W 3-1 M31 at CSUN* 13-15, 15-10, 15-13, 15-6 W 3-1 M10 LMU* 15-10, 15-7, 15-9 W 3-0 A10 at Stanford* 15-8, 15-9, 15-9 W 3-0 A2 at UC Irvine* 15-7, 15-2, 11-15, 15-9 W 3-1 M14 GEORGE MASON 15-5, 15-13, 15-6 W 3-0 A15 USC* 15-9, 15-8, 15-12 W 3-0 A5 at Hawai’i 15-10, 15-10, 15-10 W 3-0 M15 at LMU* 15-4, 15-6, 15-6 W 3-0 A17 SAN DIEGO STATE* 15-4, 15-2, 15-8 W 3-0 A7 at Hawai’i 8-15, 10-15, 15-10, 15-4, 15-8 W 3-2 M17 OHIO STATE 15-10, 15-2, 15-9 W 3-0 M1 OHIO STATE (NCAA semis at UCLA) 15-7, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-0 A10 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11, 15-4, 15-9 W 3-0 A4 PEPPERDINE* 15-6, 15-1, 15-4 W 3-0 M2 USC (NCAA Champ. at UCLA) 15-11, 15-2, 16-14 W 3-0 A11 LONG BEACH ST.(UCLA Tny) 13-15, 16-14, 11-15, 15-4, 15-13 W 3-2 A7 USC (at UCSB Tny) 10-15, 15-13, 15-10, 16-14 W 3-1 A15 USC (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 15-5, 16-14, 15-5 W 3-0 A8 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Tny) 15-6, 15-9, 15-13 W 3-0 A17 Stanford (playoffs-at UC Irvine) 10-15, 9-15, 11-15 L 0-3 A11 at CSUN* 15-3, 12-15, 15-9, 14-16, 15-3 W 3-2 A12 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-4, 13-15, 12-15, 14-16 L 1-3 A14 at Stanford* 15-6, 15-11, 11-15, 8-15, 15-11 W 3-2 A19 STANFORD* 7-15, 10-15, 6-15 L 0-3 A21 USC* 15-12, 15-13, 10-15, 15-11 W 3-1 M5 PENN ST. (NCAA semis at UCLA) 15-6, 15-4, 15-9 W 3-0 M6 STANFORD (NCAA Champ. at UCLA) 15-1, 15-13, 4-15, 15-12 W 3-1

53 RECORDS

J27 California (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9, 15-6 W 2-0 (30-9, 15-5 CIVA: T2nd Place; Coach: Al Scates; Final AVCA Rank: 2) 1986 J27 Chico State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-2, 15-3 W 2-0 J18 at California (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-0, 15-5 W 2-0 J27 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 15-4 W 2-0 (32-3, 15-1 NCAA Champions; CIVA T1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) J18 UC Davis (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-10, 15-5 W 2-0 1981 J28 Manitoba (at UCSB Invit.) 15-6, 15-11 W 2-0 J10 UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UCSB) 15-2, 15-3 W 2-0 J18 UC Riverside (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-2, 15-3 W 2-0 J28 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-3, 15-10 W 2-0 J10 at UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UCSB) 11-15,8-15 L 0-2 J18 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-7, 15-8 W 2-0 F3 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-8, 9-15, 15-10, 12-15, 15-9 W 3-2 J17 at BYU 15-7,15-5,13-15,15-9 W 3-1 J18 UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-0, 15-10 W 2-0 F4 at CSUN* 15-11, 15-3, 15-11 W 3-0 J28 at Pepperdine 15-10,15-8,15-12 W 3-0 J18 UC San Diego (All Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-11, 15-6 W 2-0 F10 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-4, 15-3, 15-13 W 3-0 J30 Pepperdine (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9,15-10 W 2-0 J24 USC (Kilgour Cup) 15-8, 10-15, 15-5, 15-3 W 3-1 F12 at Stanford* (at Menlo College) 15-10, 15-8, 15-8 W 3-0 J30 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 15-7,13-15,15-8 W 2-1 J31 BYU (at UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 15-10 W 2-0 F17 at LMU* 15-2, 15-5, 15-1 W 3-0 J30 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-2,15-11 W 2-0 J31 California (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-8 W 2-0 F22 USC* 15-11, 15-12, 15-8 W 3-0 J31 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-5,15-6 W 2-0 J31 Humboldt State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-7, 15-10 W 2-0 F24 PEPPERDINE* 15-11, 15-12, 15-12 W 3-0 F4 Long Beach St.* 15-2,15-0,15-11 W 3-0 F1 San Jose State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-11, 16-14 W 2-0 F29 BALL STATE 15-6, 15-3, 15-2 W 3-0 F7 JAPAN ALL-STARS (exhib.) 14-16,15-7,15-7,15-13 W 3-1 F1 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-7, 15-10 W 2-0 M2 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-11, 15-3, 15-12 W 3-0 F5 at Pepperdine* 15-8, 5-15, 11-15, 13-15 L 1-3 F11 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-6,15-6,15-10 W 3-0 M9 UC SANTA BARBARA (UCLA Tny) 6-15, 15-5, 15-5, 9-15, 15-10 W 3-2 F18 at LMU* 15-6,15-4,15-13 W 3-0 F7 Ball State (at George Mason Tny) 8-15, 15-5, 15-5, 15-2 W 3-1 M10 PEPPERDINE (UCLA Tny) 15-11, 13-15, 15-5, 15-9 W 3-1 F20 STANFORD* 15-5,15-6,15-13 W 3-0 F8 at George Mason (at George Mason Tny) 15-10, 15-11, 9-15, 15-8 W 3-1 M14 at Hawai’i* 15-10, 15-10, 15-12 W 3-0 F12 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-5, 16-14, 17-15 W 3-0 F25 at Pepperdine* 15-9,11-15,15-11,15-9 W 3-1 M15 at BYU-Hawai’i 15-11, 12-15, 15-8, 15-6 W 3-1 F27 at San Diego St.* 15-6, 17-15,16-14 W 3-0 F14 LONG BEACH ST.* (wc) 15-8, 15-0, 15-12 W 3-0 M16 at Hawai’i* 15-17, 15-6, 15-3, 10-15, 15-5 W 3-2 M4 HAWAI’I* 15-3,15-9,13-15,15-7 W 3-1 F15 SAN DIEGO STATE* (wc) 15-4, 14-16, 15-7, 15-10 W 3-1 M28 at Long Beach St.* 15-8, 15-7, 16-14 W 3-0 F19 at Long Beach St.* 15-3, 15-10, 8-15, 15-17, 12-15 L 2-3 M6 Pepperdine (at Rutgers Tny) 15-8, 15-6, 15-11 W 3-0 M30 STANFORD* 15-1, 15-13, 15-6 W 3-0 M7 USC (at Rutgers Tny) 15-6, 15-13, 13-15,15-9 W 3-1 F21 ST. MARY’S* (wc) 15-5, 15-4, 15-6 W 3-0 A4 at Pepperdine* 15-8, 15-7, 15-8 W 3-0 M13 at USC* 15-4, 7-15,11-15,9-15 L 1-3 F22 at USC* 7-15, 7-15, 7-15 L 0-3 A6 at USC* 15-13, 16-14, 15-10 W 3-0 F26 at Stanford* 19-17, 5-15, 10-15, 15-10, 15-12 W 3-2 M18 at Long Beach St.* 15-7,15-9,15-10 W 3-0 A11 at San Diego St.* 13-15, 15-8, 16-14, 15-7 W 3-1 A1 at Stanford* 15-0,15-0,15-0 W 3-0 F27 at St. Mary’s * 15-4, 15-13, 12-15, 15-3 W 3-1 A13 CSUN* 15-8, 15-11, 15-5 W 3-0 M5 PENN STATE 10-15, 6-15, 9-15 L 0-3 A3 Stanford (at Ohio St. Tny) 15-7,15-8,15-12 W 3-0 A18 LMU* 15-3, 15-5, 15-5 W 3-0 A4 USC (at Ohio St. Tny) 15-9,9-15,15-4,15-8 W 3-1 M7 USC (UCLA Tny) 11-15, 11-15, 11-15 L 0-3 A20 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-8, 15-12, 13-15, 12-15, 15-7 W 3-2 A8 LMU* 15-8,15-10,15-10 W 3-0 M8 PEPPERDINE (UCLA Tny) 15-7, 12-15, 12-15 L 1-2 M4 BALL STATE (NCAA semis at UCLA) 15-8, 15-4, 15-6 W 3-0 M12 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-4, 15-9, 15-13 W 3-0 A10 PEPPERDINE (at UCLA Tny) 15-12,15-9,14-16,15-6 W 3-1 M5 PEPPERDINE (NCAA at UCLA) 15-11, 15-13, 16-18, 15-12 W 3-1 M14 USC* 12-15, 15-12, 15-9, 6-15, 9-15 L 2-3 A11 USC (at UCLA Tny) 11-15,15-13,15-12,16-14 W 3-1 M19 at CSUN* 15-10, 15-2, 15-11 W 3-0 A15 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-11,15-9,15-9 W 3-0 A17 USC* 15-7,8-15,18-16,13-15,15-9 W 3-2 M22 LMU*(wc) 15-3, 15-5, 15-8 W 3-0 1983 (27-4, 13-3 NCAA Champions; CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) A2 at Hawai’i* 11-15, 15-5, 14-16, 15-9, 15-11 W 3-2 A18 at Hawai’i* 11-15,15-4,15-3,15-3 W 3-1 J15 UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC Riverside) 15-4, 15-4 W 2-0 A4 at Hawai’i* 12-15, 4-15, 15-13, 15-6, 10-15 L 2-3 A22 PEPPERDINE* 16-14,15-9,15-6 W 3-0 J15 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UCR) 12-15, 15-6, 15-6 W 2-1 A9 STANFORD* 7-15, 15-10, 15-9, 15-13 W 3-1 A24 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-10,15-11,15-8 W 3-0 J19 USC (Kilgour Cup) 16-14, 15-8, 15-7 W 3-0 A11 at LMU* 15-5, 15-6, 15-9 W 3-0 A29 USC (CIVA playoff at Santa Monica Col.) 15-11,12-15,15-9,13-15,9-15 L 2-3 J28 BYU (at UCSB Invit.) 15-13, 15-4 W 2-0 A12 at San Diego State* 15-4, 15-2, 15-5 W 3-0 M1 Hawai’i (Western Reg.) 15-12,15-8,15-10 W 3-0 J28 UC San Diego (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9, 16-14 W 2-0 A18 CSUN* 15-5, 15-8, 15-3 W 3-0 M2 Long Beach St. (Western Reg.) 15-5,16-14,13-15,15-13 W 3-1 J28 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-11 W 2-0 A19 PEPPERDINE* 10-15, 15-12, 15-4, 15-4 W 3-1 M8 Ohio State (NCAA semis at UCSB) 15-8,15-7,15-9 W 3-0 J29 Long Beach State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-12, 15-12 W 2-0 M9 USC (NCAA Champ. at UCSB) 11-15,15-7,15-11,8-15,15-13 W 3-2 A24 Stanford (NCAA Reg. at LMU) 15-3, 15-10, 15-13 W 3-0 J29 Manitoba (at UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 15-13 W 2-0 A26 Pepperdine (NCAA Reg. at LMU) 13-15,14-16, 15-8,10-15 L 1-3 J29 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-17, 15-9, 15-10 W 2-1 F4 at San Diego St.* 9-15, 15-10, 7-15, 11-15 L 1-3 F5 at UC San Diego 15-5, 15-11, 16-14 W 3-0 1980 (32-2, 18-0 CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) F9 PEPPERDINE* 10-15, 15-11, 4-15, 15-7, 8-15 L 2-3 1985 (32-8, 13-5 CIVA: 3rd Place; Coach: Al Scates) J19 California (All-Cal Tny at UCSD) 15-6,15-7 W 2-0 F16 LMU* 15-2, 15-0, 15-11 W 3-0 J19 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UCSD) 15-12,15-9 W 2-0 J18 ST. MARY’S (mg) 15-3, 15-5, 15-5 W 3-0 F18 at USC* 15-6, 15-11, 17-15 W 3-0 J22 Cal Poly Pomona 15-10, 15-10, 12-15, 15-9 W 3-1 J19 at UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-11, 15-0 W 2-0 F23 at Long Beach St.* 15-9, 9-15, 4-15, 15-3, 15-0 W 3-2 J26 at CSUN 15-6,15-7,15-9 W 3-0 J19 California (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-5, 15-2 W 2-0 F25 HAWAI’I* 15-7, 14-16, 1-15, 11-15 L 1-3 J30 at Pepperdine 15-13,15-8,14-16,15-6 W 3-1 J19 UC San Francisco (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-1, 15-3 W 2-0 M2 STANFORD* 15-9, 15-12, 12-15, 15-3 W 3-1 F2 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9, 15-4 W 2-0 J19 UC Irvine (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 15-6, 15-7 W 2-0 M4 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-8, 15-10, 15-10 W 3-0 F2 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 15-4, 15-12 W 2-0 J19 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC San Diego) 14-16, 3-15 L 0-2 M11 Ohio St. (at Rutgers-Newark) 15-7, 13-15, 6-15, 15-10, 15-8 W 3-2 F2 San Diego St. (at UCSB Invit.) 15-9,15-13 W 2-0 J23 USC (Kilgour Cup) 15-9, 15-6, 16-14 W 3-0 M16 at LMU* 15-7, 15-3, 12-15, 6-15, 15-1 W 3-2 F2 Pepperdine (at UCSB Invit.) 15-3,13-15,15-8 W 2-1 J25 California (at UCSB Invit.) 9-15, 15-1, 15-5 W 2-1 M18 at Pepperdine* 15-8, 15-4, 12-15, 9-15, 15-13 W 3-2 F6 UC SAN DIEGO 15-4, 16-14 W 2-0 J25 Long Beach State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 15-3 W 2-0 A1 at Stanford* 15-9, 8-15, 15-5, 15-8 W 3-1 F8 at LMU* 15-2,15-3,15-4 W 3-0 J25 Chico State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-6, 15-4 W 2-0 A6 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-6, 15-13, 15-8 W 3-0 F15 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-12,13-15,17-15,15-6 W 3-1 J25 CSUN (at UCSB Invit.) 9-15, 15-1, 15-12 W 2-1 A9 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-3, 14-16, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-1 F16 CAL POLY SLO* 15-3,15-6,16-14 W 3-0 J25 Westmont (at UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 15-8 W 2-0 A13 HAWAI’I* 11-15, 14-16, 15-12, 15-13, 15-8 W 3-2 F22 at USC* (mg) 15-7,15-11,15-11 W 3-0 J26 USC (at UCSB Invit.) 15-7, 15-9 W 2-0 A15 UC SANTA BARBARA (UCLA Tny) 15-6, 15-6, 15-6 W 3-0 F27 at Pepperdine* 15-3,16-14,15-10 W 3-0 J26 Manitoba (at UCSB Invit.) 15-8, 15-7 W 2-0 A16 PEPPERDINE(UCLA Tny) 15-17, 17-15, 15-10, 13-15, 6-15 L 2-3 F29 at Rutgers (at Rutgers Tny) 15-5,16-14,15-10 W 3-0 J26 Stanford (at UCSB Invit.) 10-15, 15-2, 5-15, 9-15 L 1-3 A20 USC* 15-8, 15-12, 13-15, 15-3 W 3-1 M1 USC (at Rutgers Tny) 15-12,13-15,11-15,9-15 L 1-3 J30 CSUN* 15-5, 15-11, 15-9 W 3-0 A22 at UC Santa Barbara* 16-14, 15-13, 12-15, 15-4 W 3-1 F1 at George Mason 15-11, 15-2, 15-6 W 3-0 M5 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-17,15-7,15-7,15-7 W 3-1 M6 at Ohio State (NCAA semis-at Ohio St.) 15-4, 15-5, 15-4 W 3-0 M8 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-6,15-7,15-1 W 3-0 F2 at Penn State (Westchester Co. Arena) 15-7, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-0 M7 Pepperdine (NCAA Champ.-at Ohio St.) 15-10, 16-14, 15-7 W 3-0 F6 at Long Beach State* 16-14, 15-10, 15-11 W 3-0 M13 at California* 15-5,15-11,15-6 W 3-0 F8 STANFORD* 15-5, 15-9, 15-3 W 3-0 M14 at Stanford* 13-15,15-6,15-7,15-1 W 3-1 F13 at Pepperdine* 11-15, 7-15, 12-15 L 0-3 M28 at UC Santa Barbara* 13-15,15-11,15-6,15-7 W 3-1 F15 HAWAI’I* 15-6, 15-13, 15-8 W 3-0 1982 (29-0, 16-0 NCAA Champions; CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) M29 at Cal Poly SLO* 15-1,15-10,15-8 W 3-0 F19 HAWAI’I* 10-15, 15-8, 15-12, 15-10 W 3-1 J15 UC Davis (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-8, 15-2 W 2-0 A4 STANFORD* 15-2,15-3,15-3 W 3-0 F20 LMU* 15-17, 15-5, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-1 J15 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Berkeley) 15-8, 15-10, 15-1 W 3-0 A9 at Long Beach St.* 15-12,9-15,15-13,15-9 W 3-1 F22 at San Diego State* 15-5, 13-15, 15-11, 14-16, 15-4 W 3-2 J27 USC (Kilgour Cup) 15-10, 15-12, 11-15, 15-5 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 M1 UC SANTA BARBARA (at UCLA Tny) 15-12, 16-14, 15-5 W 3-0 J29 Long Beach St. (at UCSB Invit.) 16-14, 15-5 W 2-0 A16 LMU* 15-5,15-3,15-5 W 3-0 M2 PEPPERDINE (at UCLA Tny) 15-12, 15-11, 11-15, 15-10 W 3-1 J29 at UC Santa Barbara (at UCSB Invit.) 15-11, 15-9 W 2-0 M6 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-12, 22-20, 15-6 W 3-0 J30 USC (at UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 15-5 W 2-0 A18 at San Diego St.* 15-8,15-5,9-15,15-8 W 3-1 M8 at USC* 12-15, 15-11, 11-15, 10-15 L 1-3 J30 USC (at UCSB Invit.) 15-3, 15-2 W 2-0 A23 PEPPERDINE* 15-9,15-6,15-11 W 3-0 M13 at LMU* 15-2, 15-5, 7-15, 15-6 W 3-1 F5 at Stanford* 15-2, 15-6, 11-15, 15-6 W 3-1 A25 CALIFORNIA* W 3-0 A26 USC* 15-11,15-3,10-15,15-3 W 3-1 M15 GEORGE MASON (wc) 15-8, 15-2, 15-8 W 3-0 F10 PEPPERDINE* 15-9, 15-7, 15-8 W 3-0 M29 at UC Santa Barbara* 2-15, 15-5, 15-10, 11-15, 11-15 L 2-3 F19 at Rutgers-Newark 15-3, 15-5, 9-15, 15-11 W 3-1 M9 Ohio State (NCAA semis at Ball St.) 15-8, 15-7, 15-7 W 3-0 A3 PEPPERDINE* 12-15, 15-6, 15-9, 7-15, 12-15 L 2-3 F24 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-0, 15-0, 15-8 W 3-0 M10 USC (NCAA Champ. at Ball St.) 7-15,15-6,3-15,8-15 L 1-3 A5 USC* 14-16, 15-8, 13-15, 12-15 L 1-3 M3 at LMU* 15-2, 15-4, 16-14 W 3-0 A10 at Stanford* 10-15, 15-10, 15-9, 15-13 W 3-1 M5 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-13, 15-9, 15-9 W 3-0 A12 at CSUN* 15-9, 15-6, 8-15, 15-5 W 3-1 M10 USC* 15-3, 15-12, 15-6 W 3-0 A19 SAN DIEGO STATE* 15-12, 15-2, 15-8 W 3-0 M12 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-1, 15-10, 15-8 W 3-0 A20 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-1, 15-13, 15-8 W 3-0 M17 at Pepperdine* 15-8, 15-9, 15-11 W 3-0 A25 UC Santa Barbara (NCAA Reg. at CSUN) 15-5, 15-4, 15-12 W 3-0 M18 at Long Beach St.* 15-7, 9-15, 15-8, 15-10 W 3-1 A27 USC (NCAA Reg. at CSUN) 13-15, 11-15, 7-15 L 0-3 M28 LMU* 15-2, 15-2, 15-11 W 3-0 M31 at Hawai’i* 17-15, 15-2, 15-7 W 3-0 A4 at Hawai’i* 15-8, 11-15, 17-15, 15-7 W 3-1 1984 (38-0, 18-0 NCAA Champions; CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) A7 STANFORD* 15-12, 15-4, 15-5 W 3-0 J14 at Penn State 15-4, 15-11, 15-3 W 3-0 A9 at USC* 14-16, 15-9, 15-8, 15-17, 15-9 W 3-2 J18 USC (Kilgour Cup) 15-10, 15-13,14-16, 15-8 W 3-1 A16 at San Diego St.* 15-7, 15-6, 14-16, 15-6 W 3-1 J20 UC San Diego (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-6, 15-2 W 2-0 A17 at UC San Diego 15-5, 15-3, 12-15, 15-5 W 3-1 J20 UC Santa Cruz (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-7, 15-4 W 2-0 A21 UC SANTA BARBARA* 15-8, 15-13, 15-11 W 3-0 J20 California (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-11, 15-0 W 2-0 A23 PENN ST. (UCLA Tny) 15-12, 15-7, 15-11 W 3-0 J20 UC Davis (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-3, 15-11 W 2-0 A24 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-4, 9-15, 15-7, 15-11 W 3-1 J20 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-3, 15-7, 15-9 W 3-0 M5 Ohio State (NCAA semis-at Penn State) 15-10, 15-12, 15-7 W 3-0 J27 Cal Poly SLO (at UCSB Invit.) 15-11, 15-11 W 2-0 M6 at Penn State (NCAA Champ.-at Penn State) 15-4, 15-9, 15-7 W 3-0 J27 San Diego State (at UCSB Invit.) 15-11, 15-3 W 2-0

54 RECORDS

1979 (31-0, 18-0 NCAA Champions; CIVA: 1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) 1976(14-2, 10-2 NCAA Champions; SCIVA:1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) J14 California (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-10,15-3 W 2-0 F6 Stanford 15-6,15-6,15-3 W 3-0 J14 UC Santa Barbara (All-Cal Tny at UC Davis) 15-3,15-2 W 2-0 F18 LMU* 5-15,15-12,15-10,16-14 W 3-1 J28 at UC Santa Barbara (UCSB Invit.) 15-5, 15-7 W 2-0 F20 UC Santa Barbara* 14-16,12-15,12-15 L 0-3 J28 San Diego St. (UCSB Invit.) 15-4,15-3 W 2-0 F25 Long Beach St.* 15-5,12-15,15-13,15-8 W 3-1 J28 USC (UCSB Invit.) 15-10,15-6 W 2-0 F28 San Diego St.* 15-9,15-8,15-8 W 3-0 J28 San Diego St. (UCSB Invit.) 15-12,15-11 W 2-0 M6 USC* 15-9,12-15,15-13,15-8 W 3-1 F3 CSUN 15-3,15-9,15-8 W 3-0 M10 LMU* 15-5,15-3,15-9 W 3-0 F10 California* 15-2,15-10,15-2 W 3-0 M12 at Pepperdine* 15-11,12-15,14-16,11-15 L 1-3 F14 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-3, 15-5, 15-6 W 3-0 M17 Long Beach State* 15-9,15-11,15-11 W 3-0 F17 at Cal Poly SLO* 15-9, 15-7, 15-4 W 3-0 A7 USC* 15-7,15-6,6-15,17-15 W 3-1 F21 Long Beach St.* 15-6,15-3,15-7 W 3-0 A9 PEPPERDINE* 15-11,11-15,15-13,14-16,15-7 W 3-2 F28 Stanford* 15-5,15-3,15-6 W 3-0 A14 UC Santa Barbara* 15-12,8-15,15-8,15-12 W 3-1 M2 at Rutgers (Rutgers Tny) 15-12,15-13,13-15,15-5 W 3-1 A16 San Diego St.* 3-15, 15-3,15-4,15-9 W 3-1 M3 USC (Rutgers Tny) 15-8,15-9,15-11 W 3-0 A20 Pepperdine (Western Sect. playoff :Santa Monica) 13-15,15-13,15-7,16-14 W 3-1 M7 USC* 15-12,15-4,15-5 W 3-0 M1 Springfi eld (NCAA semis at Ball St.) 15-4,15-2,15-5 W 3-0 M9 San Diego St.* 15-6,15-7,15-7 W 3-0 M2 Pepperdine (NCAA Champ. at Ball St.) 18-16,15-9,15-11 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 NOTE ---- Complete Records available thru 1976 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 UCLA’S AVCA POLL HISTORY M31 USC* 15-6,15-11,15-11 W 3-0 Year Highest Pre-season Final Rank A4 LMU* 15-6,15-5,15-12 W 3-0 2019 2 2 7 A6 Ohio State (UCLA Tny) 15-1,15-2,19-17 W 3-0 2018 2 4 2 A7 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11,15-9,15-10 W 3-0 2017 2 2 6 A11 UC Santa Barbara* 15-5,15-6,13-15,15-4 W 3-1 2016 1 5 3 A13 Stanford* 15-8,15-3,15-17,15-4 W 3-1 2015 4 5 12 A14 California* 15-3,15-13,15-11 W 3-0 2014 1 2 9 A18 Pepperdine* 15-7,16-14,16-14 W 3-0 2013 3 6 4 A20 San Diego St.* 15-4,15-9,15-7 W 3-0 2012 1 3 5 M4 BALL ST. (NCAA semis at UCLA) 15-3,15-1,15-4 W 3-0 2011 3 9 10 M5 USC (NCAA Champ. at UCLA) 12-15,15-12,15-11,15-7 W 3-1 2010 3 6 9 2009 3 8 9 2008 3 3 6 1978 (21-3, 12-2 SCIVA: T1st Place; Coach: Al Scates) 2007 3 3 7 J7 UC Santa Barbara (non-counting All-Cal Tny at UCSD) 15-7,15-7 2-0 2006 1 2 1 J21 CSUN 15-5,12-15,15-1,15-11 W 3-1 2005 1 2 2 J29 USC (non-counting at UCSB Invit.) 15-7,15-12 2-0 2004 1 2 3 F3 at California 15-3,15-5,15-6 W 3-0 2003 3 3 12 F4 at Stanford 15-6,15-1,15-8 W 3-0 2002 1 2 6 F10 STANFORD 15-6,15-2,15-3 W 3-0 2001 1 5 2 F15 at Long Beach St.* 10-15,15-8,16-14,16-14 W 3-1 2000 1 1 1 F18 at San Diego St.* 15-5,12-15,15-2,12-15,9-15 L 2-3 1999 1 1 6 M1 UC SANTA BARBARA* 16-14,15-11,15-8 W 3-0 1998 1 1 1 M3 at UC Irvine* 14-16, 15-4,15-3,15-7 W 3-1 1997 1 2 2 M8 LMU* 15-2,15-11,15-11 W 3-0 1996 1 2 1 M10 USC (UCLA Tny) 15-11,15-4,15-7 W 3-0 1995 1 1 1 M11 PEPPERDINE (UCLA Tny) 15-8,5-15,11-15,15-6,15-7 W 3-2 1994 1 1 1 M15 PEPPERDINE* 15-13,15-11,5-15,15-17,15-8 W 3-2 1993 1 2 1 M17 at USC* 11-15,15-6,17-15,15-10 W 3-1 1992 3 3 5 M29 at LMU* 15-7,15-5,15-1 W 3-0 1991 3 4 6 M31 CALIFORNIA 15-10,15-2,6-15,15-1 W 3-1 1990 1 1 3 A7 LONG BEACH ST.* 15-11,12-15,15-10,15-6 W 3-1 1989 1 3 1 A8 at UC Santa Barbara* 15-7,15-12,15-7 W 3-0 1988 2 2 5 A12 USC* 15-12,15-9,16-14 W 3-0 1987 1 2 1 A14 SAN DIEGO ST.* 15-9,15-10,18-16 W 3-0 1986 2 2 2 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

55 RECORDS

UCLA’s ALL-TIME RECORD VS. OPPONENTS (1046-305, .774, record from 1976 to present) JOHN SPERAW’S ALL-TIME BRUIN COACHING RECORD (2013-Present) Team W-L Last Meeting Team W-L Last Meeting First Meeting Ball State 1-0 2016 (W) American U.-Puerto Rico 1-0 1999 (W) 1999 BYU 5-13 2019 (L) Cal Baptist 8-2 2017 (W) Arizona 1-0 1987 (W) 1987 CSUN 8-3 2019 (L) Ball State 17-3 2016 (W) 1979 Concordia, Irvine 8-0 2019 (W) BYU 37-36 2019 (L) 1983 George Mason 2-0 2018 (W) BYU-Hawaii 1-0 1984 (W) 1984 Grand Canyon 4-0 2019 (W) Harvard 2-0 2018 (W) Cal Baptist 14-3 2017 (W) 2001 Hawai’i 5-10 2018 (W) Calgary 2-0 1987 (W) 1987 IPFW 1-0 2015 (W) California 16-0 1987 (W) 1977 King 1-0 2018 (W) Lewis 2-0 2019 (W) Cal Poly Pomona 1-0 1980 (W) 1980 Limestone 1-0 2015 (W) Cal Poly SLO 5-0 1984 (W) 1979 Lindenwood 1-0 2019 (W) Cal State San Bernardino 2-0 1998 W) 1997 Long Beach State 5-10 2019 (L) Loyola-Chicago 2-0 2019 (W) Chico State 3-0 1987 (W) 1984 McKendree 2-0 2019 (W) Concordia (CA) 8-0 2019 (W) 2000 New Jersey Insti. of Technology 1-0 2018 (W) Concordia (NY) 5-0 2003 (W) 2001 Ohio State 5-2 2019 (W) Pacifi c 4-0 2014 (W) CSUN 69-15 2019 (L) 1978 Penn State 6-0 2019 (W) George Mason 12-0 2018 (W) 1985 Pepperdine 8-6 2019 (L) Grand Canyon 5-0 2019 (W) 2009 Princeton 5-0 2019 (W) Sacred Heart 1-0 2017 (W) Harvard 2-0 2018(W) 2017 St. Francis 1-0 2016 (W) Hawai’i 64-30 2018 (W) 1981 Stanford 10-5 2019 (L) Humboldt State 1-0 1986 (W) 1986 UC Irvine 7-8 2018 (W) UC San Diego 14-0 2019 (W) IPFW 6-0 2015 (W) 1994 UC Santa Barbara 9-6 2019 (L) King 1-0 2018 (W) 2018 USC 10-5 2019 (L) LaVerne 4-0 2004 (W) 1995 Totals 139-70 Lewis 17-3 2019 (W) 1995 Limestone 1-0 2015 (W) 2015 AL SCATES’ ALL-TIME BRUIN COACHING RECORD (Scates coached UCLA from 1963-2012 - records listed are from 1976 to present) Lindenwood 1-0 2019 (W) 2018 Team W-L Last Meeting Long Beach State 64-38 2019 (L) 1976 American U.-Puerto Rico 1-0 1999 (W) Loyola-Chicago 8-0 2019 (W) 2006 Arizona 1-0 1987 (W) Ball State 16-3 2001 (W) LMU 50-1 2000 (W) 1976 BYU 32-23 2012 (W) Manitoba 3-0 1985 (W) 1983 BYU-Hawai’i 1-0 1984 (W) McKendree 2-0 2019 (W) 2018 Cal Baptist 6-1 2012 (W) Calgary 1-0 1987 (W) Navy 1-0 1993 (W) 1993 California 16-0 1987 (W) New Jersey Insti. of Technology 1-0 2018 (W) 2018 Cal Poly Pomona 1-0 1980 (W) Ohio State 18-3 2019 (W) 1979 Cal Poly SLO 5-0 1984 (W) Cal St. San Bernardino 2-0 1998 (W) Pacifi c 40-2 2014 (W) 1994 Chico State 3-0 1987 (W) Penn State 31-5 2019 (W) 1982 Concordia (NY) 5-0 2003 (W) Pepperdine 75-43 2019 (L) 1976 CSUN 61-12 2012 (W) George Mason 10-0 2005 (W) Princeton 5-0 2019 (W) 2015 Grand Canyon 1-0 2010 (W) Rutgers 7-0 2005 (W) 1978 Hawai’i 59-20 2012 (W) Sacred Heart 1-0 2017(W) 2017 Humboldt State 1-0 1986 (W) IPFW 5-0 2006 (W) St. Francis (PA) 1-0 2016 (W) 2015 LaVerne 4-0 2004 (W) St. Mary’s 3-0 1986 (W) 1985 Lewis 15-3 2012 (W) San Diego State 43-3 2000 (W) 1976 Long Beach State 59-28 2012 (W) Loyola-Chicago 6-0 2011 (W) San Jose State 1-0 1986 (W) 1986 LMU 50-1 2000 (W) Springfi eld 2-0 2012 (W) 1976 Manitoba 3-0 1985 (W) Stanford 72-24 2019 (L) 1976 Navy 1-0 1993 (W) Ohio State 13-1 2012 (W) UC Davis 7-0 1988 (W) 1982 Pacifi c 36-2 2012 (W) UC Irvine 56-24 2018 (W) 1977 Penn State 25-5 2011 (W) UC Riverside 2-0 1988 (W) 1986 Pepperdine 67-37 2012 (W) Rutgers-Newark 7-0 2005 (W) UC San Diego 57-6 2019 (W) 1980 Saint Mary’s 3-0 1986 (W) UC San Francisco 2-0 1987 (W) 1985 San Diego State 43-3 2000 (W) UC Santa Barbara 101-28 2019 (L) 1976 San Jose State 1-0 1986 (W) Springfi eld 2-0 2012 (W) UC Santa Cruz 9-0 2008 (W) 1984 Stanford 62-19 2012 (W) USC 86-38 2019 (L) 1976 UC Davis 7-0 1988 (W) Westmont 1-0 1985 (W) 1985 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 56 RECORDS

UCLA MVB MPSF PLAYOFF HISTORY All-Time MPSF Post-Season Record: 29-19 (home: 17-4, neutral: 9-2, away: 3-13) 2005 MPSF Tournament Championships: (7) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2006 Round Opponent Result Qtr. CSUN L 2-3 2019 Round Opponent Result 2004 Qtr. #7 Concordia W 3-0 Round Opponent Result Semis #3 USC (@ Pepperdine) L 1-3 Qtr. Hawai’i W 3-0 Semis Long Beach State (@ BYU) L 0-3 2018 Round Opponent Result 2003 Qtr. #7 Stanford W 3-0 Did not advance Semis #4 Concordia (@BYU) W 3-1 Champ. @ #1 BYU L 1-3 2002 Round Opponent Result 2017 Qtr. @ UC Santa Barbara L 2-3 Round Opponent Result Qtr. at #4 UC Irvine L 1-3 2001 Round Opponent Result 2016 Qtr. Stanford W 3-2 Round Opponent Result Semis Long Beach State (@ BYU) W 3-2 Qtr. #7 Hawai’i W 3-1 Champ Hawai’i (@ BYU) W 3-1 Semis #3 Long Beach State (@ BYU) W 3-0 Champ @ #1 BYU L 1-3 2000 Round Opponent Result 2015 Qtr. BYU W 3-0 Round Opponent Result Semis LMU W 3-1 Qtr. @ #1 UC Irvine L 0-3 Champ @ Pepperdine W 3-1

2014 1999 Round Opponent Result Round Opponent Result Qtr. @ #4 UC Santa Barbara L 2-3 Qtr. @ Hawai’i L 1-3

2013 1998 Round Opponent Result Round Opponent Result Qtr. #5 Pepperdine W 3-0 Qtr. LMU W 3-0 Semis @ #1 BYU L 2-3 Semis Long Beach State W 3-0 Champ Pepperdine L 1-3 2012 Round Opponent Result 1997 Qtr. @ #4 UC Irvine L 1-3 Round Opponent Result Qtr. Pacifi c W 3-0 2011 Semis UC Santa Barbara W 3-0 Round Opponent Result Champ Stanford L 0-3 Qtr. @ #1 USC L 1-3 1996 2010 Round Opponent Result Round Opponent Result Qtr. Pacifi c W 3-0 Qtr. @ #2 BYU L 1-3 Semis CSUN (@ Hawai’i) W 3-1 Champ UC Santa Barbara (@ Hawai’i) W 3-2 2009 Round Opponent Result 1995 Qtr. @ #1 UC Irvine L 1-3 Round Opponent Result Qtr. USC W 3-0 2008 Semis BYU W 3-0 Round Opponent Result Champ Hawai’i W 3-1 Qtr. Pepperdine L 1-3 1994 2007 Round Opponent Result Round Opponent Result Champ @ Stanford W 3-0 Qtr. @ UC Santa Barbara L 1-3 1993 2006 Round Opponent Result Round Opponent Result Champ Stanford (@ UC Irvine) W 3-0 Play-In UC Santa Barbara W 3-1 Qtr. @ Hawai’i W 3-1 Semis Pepperdine (@ UC Irvine) W 3-0 Champ Long Beach State (@ UC Irvine) W 3-1

57