Jackie Robinson Stadium will remain the Bruins’ home for at least two more games.
No. 15 seed UCLA baseball (42-16, 22-8 Big Ten) was selected to be an NCAA tournament regional host Sunday evening and will return to Westwood for the double-elimination portion of the tournament, which begins Friday.
This post was updated May 26 at 10:50 p.m.
While every season celebrates its star, it also gives rise to unexpected standouts. Whether through breakout performances or quiet consistency, several Bruins made the leap from role players to program cornerstones.
This post was updated May 22 at 11:11 p.m.
With just softball and baseball remaining in the postseason hunt, UCLA’s first year in the Big Ten is nearly in the books.
No. 2 seed UCLA baseball (39-15, 22-8 Big Ten) missed out on the conference playoffs last season but will enter its first-ever Big Ten tournament as co-conference regular season champions, with No.
Gerrit Cole, Rob Rasmussen, Trevor Bauer, Adam Plutko, Cody Poteet, James Kaprielian.
Coach John Savage’s three College World Series teams were anchored by future MLB pitchers.
This post was updated May 9 at 6:22 p.m.
Nebraska’s Jordy Bahl was named the Big Ten’s first ever Pitcher and Player of the Year on Friday.
But the Bruins made the Cornhuskers’ two-way ace look mortal in Bittinger Stadium later that very same day.
Despite Bahl’s 1.46 ERA entering the affair, No.
It may not be Ojai, California – the longtime site of the Pac-12 tournament – but No. 2 seed UCLA men’s tennis (13-8, 11-2 Big Ten) will travel to Columbus, Ohio, for its inaugural Big Ten tournament.
This post was updated April 24 at 10:49 p.m.
Nico Iamaleava had his worst performance on the biggest stage last season.
In his first College Football Playoff appearance, Iamaleava completed just 14-of-31 passes for 104 yards, costing his team a trip to the Rose Bowl as eventual national champion Ohio State trampled Iamaleava and Tennessee 42-17.
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