Almost one year ago, Christen Press was the reason for the Bruins’ undoing.

Ten months removed from a fateful postseason showdown in which the Stanford forward buried the game-winning goal that thwarted UCLA’s bid to advance to the finals of the 2009 NCAA Women’s College Cup, Press foiled the No. 13 Bruins again.

After putting together a 1-0 win over No. 16 Cal (5-3-4, 0-2 Pac-10) on Friday, UCLA (8-4-1, 1-1) fell to No. 1 Stanford (11-0-2, 2-0) 2-0 Sunday at Drake Stadium, thanks in large part to an early goal from Press.

From the get-go, UCLA coach Jillian Ellis figured it was going to be a barometer match. After all, the trajectories of the two teams haven’t exactly been running parallel; while Stanford has yet to be defeated this season, UCLA is now four losses deep.

“This is a team that’s growing and has been in every big game, so now, we have to show up in the games that I think our players have overlooked in the course of the season,” Ellis said. “The challenge for us is to come out next weekend and be as focused and as hungry.”

The Cardinal’s first goal came in the 23rd minute after a controversial handball was called against the Bruins inside the box, resulting in a penalty kick that Press easily converted for her 16th goal on the year. It was an exasperating turn of events for UCLA, considering it had been playing Stanford tit-for-tat up until that point.

“We were frustrated because we knew we had this team,” sophomore defender Lucretia Lee said. “It was a simple goal that basically got given to them.”

More bad news struck the Bruins in the 31st minute when freshman midfielder Chelsea Braun went down in a heap after injuring her right knee. She did not return to the match and was on crutches.

To add insult to injury, Stanford recorded its insurance goal on a corner kick in the 36th minute when Cardinal midfielder Mariah Nogueira got to a loose ball and scored from six yards out.

The silver lining to the match came in the second half, when the Bruins executed a more even-keeled style of play, with both teams firing off five shots apiece in the second period.

“I don’t think the players were too disappointed in the result,” Ellis said. “As far as measuring ourselves, there were some good things for us.”

“We started attacking really hard again,” sophomore midfielder Chelsea Cline added. “With the chances that we were given, we just had that final pass that we needed to finish on.”

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