This post was updated Nov. 30 at 8:43 p.m.
On a weekend built around gratitude, the Bruins found something of their own to be grateful for – their grit.
And after long battles in the Great Lakes state, they may also be thankful for what that grit possibly earned them – a chance at a postseason berth.
UCLA women’s volleyball (18-12, 12-8 Big Ten) ended its conference play on the road, taking down Michigan (21-10, 11-9) in five sets in Ann Arbor, Michigan, before capping off its campaign with another five-set victory against Michigan State (18-12, 8-12) in East Lansing, Michigan. The Bruins won all but one of their seven five-set battles this year.
“I think our ability to respond when we are not playing at the highest ceiling of our potential, we’re still finding ways to win,” coach Alfee Reft said. “So I’m just proud of seeing the fight of our team, and they’re pretty robust with staying in it, even if it feels at times like it’s not always the cleanest. They keep finding ways.”
Finding a way to win has been the Bruins’ story all season. The squad entered 2025 with higher expectations from many following the signing of five transfers and has shown the ups and downs of a new unit.
Starting quick and falling short has happened in prior matches for UCLA, but after dropping the middle two sets to Michigan, the No. 2-ranked defense in the Big Ten took over.
The offensive turnaround brought out balanced play from the crew.
The defense became the quiet spine of the match, amassing 57 digs and 58 assists across the match, spearheaded by sophomore libero Lola Schumacher and sophomore setter Kate Duffey.
“The biggest thing is my front row – they make our job so easy,” Schumacher said. “Whether that’s blocking, getting great touches up the block or even if they’re not blocking – just making an area where they can funnel the ball into me – is so easy for me to read and take a ball. I think that the freedom and ability to do that has helped our back grow.”

Senior outside hitter Cheridyn Leverette reached a season-high 25 kills on a .353 clip against the Wolverines. Freshman outside hitter Eliana Urzua – who has seen limited playing time since Oct. 22, as she deals with an undisclosed injury – recorded 14 kills in her return to a full match of play.
“It was a lot feeding off of each other’s energy,” Urzua said. “A lot of different people made a lot of big plays during the fifth set, and I think we fed off of that and focused on doing it for each other, rather than just single, for ourselves.”
UCLA stepped onto the Breslin Center court for its last game of conference play against Michigan State on Friday.
The match began like many others this season, with the Bruins starting slowly. The Spartans fed off of consistent attack and defensive errors by the Bruins. Those faults allowed Michigan State to hold as high as an eight-point lead through the set, ultimately winning 25-17.
The Bruins retained composure, however, and refocused throughout the second and third sets. Leverette delivered the winning kill to end the second set and finished the match with 17 kills.
The Bruins found themselves going to a fifth set for the second consecutive game.
“Our team did a phenomenal job having those gritty wins,” Schumacher said. “Today, against Michigan State, we lost the fourth one going into the fifth one, and being able to flip that switch and regroup really quickly is a big skill we’ve been working on.”
The Bruins finished the season with a .600 conference winning percentage – their highest under Reft and ranked No. 34 in RPI. Now UCLA awaits the NCAA Tournament’s Selection Show, which will take place Sunday, to see if a three-year postseason drought ends – which would give Reft his first opportunity to coach in the playoffs.
“It is a fast turnaround, but there’s not a whole lot you’re recreating at this point … so we’re excited to get home, find out who we play and start preparing for those opponents,” Reft said.
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