This post was updated March 9 at 11:11 p.m.
The NIL era has elicited an immense amount of turnover through the transfer portal.
And UCLA softball lost two ostensibly pivotal pieces in former Bruin pitchers Kaitlyn Terry and Addisen Fisher ahead of its 2026 campaign.
[Related: Transfer portal ravages UCLA softball: A look into the teams’ 2026 pitching staff]
Yet, limited turnover – concerning athletes and coaches alike – has not just defined the Bruins’ recent success.
It has been the fundamental reason why UCLA has established itself as the winningest softball program in the nation.
Only three coaches – former head honchos Sharron Backus and Sue Enquist, along with current coach Kelly Inouye-Perez – have helmed the program across its 51-year existence, with each leading the squad for 15-plus seasons.
“I’m honored to be a part of the program that is so rich and prestigious … throughout history,” said senior utility Megan Grant. “I didn’t really realize it at the time – always playing in the game – but I feel really blessed to be able to put my name down with all those GOATs.”
The coaching trio has hoisted 12 national titles, with each coach contributing at least two trophies while at the helm.
Yet, excellence is often only sustained if knowledge is passed down from one capable successor to another.
The Bruins’ excellence began with Backus, who appointed Enquist to co-head coach in 1989 after the latter played with the Bruins from 1975 to 1978.
And Enquist, who took over the sole head coaching role in 1997, passed the torch to Inouye-Perez in 2007. The current head honcho spent five years, from 1989 to 1993, as UCLA’s catcher under Enquist and Backus, helping win three national championships.

Similar to how Backus carefully hand-picked and developed a successor poised to succeed, Enquist reflected this precedent with Inouye-Perez. The current Bruin coach passed Enquist as UCLA softball’s winningest coach when she earned her No. 888 win in UCLA’s 15-12 victory against Florida on Feb. 27.
[Related: Wins at Judi Garman Classic make Kelly Inouye-Perez winningest UCLA softball coach]
“The goal is to be able to sustain this program – the tradition of excellence that I got to be a part of as a student athlete. It started well before me. That’s our goal,” Inouye-Perez said. “Lisa (Associate head coach Lisa Fernandez) and I are here to be able to create the same experience and to carry on this tradition of success. It’s the people that we bring in … they give and pour into all these athletes to create moments like this.”
But this homegrown standard also applies to the Bruins’ seasoned veterans, who have shaped the team’s recent success through their long-term commitment to the Westwood program.
UCLA boasts a slim, yet impactful, senior class of Grant, infielder Jordan Woolery and pitcher Taylor Tinsley.
Woolery and Grant, who accrued four combined NFCA All-American selections across their first three campaigns, have strengthened their collective plate presence in 2026.
The “Bruin Bomber” duo leads UCLA in slugging percentage, on-base percentage and RBIs. Grant boasts the highest slugging clip in the nation with a 1.702 mark, and Woolery sports a nation-leading 47 RBIs.

Although the pitching unit has struggled throughout the 2026 campaign, notching a 4.85 collective earned-run average that ranks No. 168 across all Division I squads, Tinsley has been the sole bright spot.
The 2025 NFCA Third Team All-American and the sole returning pitcher has notched a team-leading 12 wins and 68 strikeouts across 18 appearances this season.
The three Bruin seniors established a formidable bond – a result of sticking with Inouye-Perez’s program for their entire collegiate careers.
“Tins (Taylor Tinsley), Meg (Megan Grant), our whole class … we’ve been through and through together the last four years,” Woolery said. “No matter what, Tins and Meg are going to have my back, and all our other seniors are going to have our backs too. We have so much love for each other, which is very rare, and we’ve been here all four years, which is also rare in this day and age.”
But the veteran trio has also helped develop the new crop of Bruins.
UCLA has 13 underclassmen on its roster, including six true freshmen, out of its 21 total roster spots.
And these young weapons have achieved explosive production in their budding collegiate careers.
This season, sophomore infielder Kaniya Bragg has boasted a .444 batting average – the team’s fourth-highest mark – from the formidable four-hole spot, freshman infielder Bri Alejandre has barreled eight homers this season – good for third most on the squad – and freshman Natalie Cable has struck out 26 batters, taking the runner-up punch-out rank on the team.
Inouye-Perez said that the experienced Bruins have created an environment that has helped foster immediate success among the young cohort.
“The way they’re (Grant, Woolery and Tinsley are) playing, the way they’re recognizing the younger Bruins, the way they’re picking them up. They’re doing a great job of making them feel comfortable, and the goal is to keep this young group loose,” Inouye-Perez said. “You see all these freshmen stepping into the plate and hitting their first home runs and having … quality at-bats. It’s a product of the upperclassmen creating a culture that makes it fun to play.”

But the senior trio seemingly did not prioritize cultivating younger talent without the precedent that Backus, Enquist and Inouye-Perez established.
The Bruins are following the same blueprint that has defined the “Bruin Bubble” culture for more than 50 years – even with the transfer portal’s ever-growing popularity.
And UCLA softball solidified itself as the winningest program as a result.
Texas Tech and Georgia reportedly spent a lofty sum to poach Terry and Fisher away from Westwood.
Yet, neither program has hoisted a national title.
Developing home-grown talent helps foster championship pedigree, and UCLA boasts this status because of its traditional philosophy.
Despite NIL’s increased influence on softball, little can stifle a stalwart culture, especially one that coaches and players alike embrace.
Inouye-Perez, mirroring the legacies of Backus and Enquist, along with her three senior players, shoulder the responsibility to pass the mantle to the next generation of Bruins in a new era of collegiate athletics.
And UCLA’s standard will only bolster its championship pedigree, reflecting the historical roots that have defined its storied success.
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