Friday, April 3

UCLA men’s soccer ties Michigan 3-3 despite strong offensive play

It was all looking good for the Bruins at halftime. For the first time this season, the Bruins scored three goals in one game. For the first time this season, graduate student forward/midfielder Sveinn Hauksson put the ball in the back of the net. Read more...

Photo: Graduate student midfielder/forward Sveinn Hauksson prepares to strike the ball. (Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)



UCLA football blanked in second half, succumbs to 34-17 loss against LSU

BATON ROUGE – It was a tale of two halves in Tigerland. Evidenced by their 24.5-point underdog designation, the Bruins weren’t expected to be even relatively competitive in Saturday’s game – let alone departing from “Death Valley” far from dismantled. Read more...

Photo: Redshirt senior quarterback Ethan Garbers makes adjustments to his offense before receiving the snap. Garbers notched a season-high performance Saturday, racking up 281 yards and two touchdowns. (Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor)


Gameday predictions: UCLA vs. LSU

In the first of a three-game gauntlet of ranked opponents, UCLA football (1-1, 0-1 Big Ten) is traveling to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to face No. 16 LSU (2-1, 1-0 SEC) on Saturday. Read more...

Photo: Pictured are junior running back T.J. Harden (left) and redshirt senior quarterback Ethan Garbers (right). (Photos by Aidan Sun/Assistant Photo editor. Photo illustration by Lindsey Murto/Design director)


Despite national accolades, UCLA club artistic swimming lacks Division I status

Artistic swimming at UCLA has sought the Division I stage for three years now. UCLA’s historic artistic swimming medal at the 2024 Paris Olympics could be the catalyst for sending the program to the next level. Read more...

Photo: UCLA artistic swimming stands at the top of the podium at the 2024 USA Artistic Swimming Collegiate Championships. (Courtesy of UCLA Artistic Swimming)


Battle of the Editors: Which Westwood coach will win out?

Westwood’s coaches are often the last to earn deserved glory – it’s easy to overlook their legacies and impact. After a summer of coaches leading teams to international glory or devoting their summer to leading training on campus, Daily Bruin Sports editors discuss the coaches who will have the biggest impact in 2024. Read more...

Photo: UCLA men’s volleyball coach John Speraw (left) and UCLA men’s and women’s water polo coach Adam Wright (right) are pictured. Both head honchos are on the heels of a national championship in 2023. (Left to right: Lex Wang/Daily Bruin senior staff, Karla Cardenas-Felipe/Daily Bruin)