Through all the nuances of water polo, from defensive schemes to a double helix counterattack, one aspect never changes: scoring goals. Two Bruins have shown this ability across all four years.

Senior utility Alex Roelse and senior attacker Max Irving are prepping for the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation tournament, looking for their third collegiate title and their last chance to bring a championship to the No. 3 UCLA men’s water polo team (18-3, 1-2 MPSF).

Over their four years in Westwood, Roelse has scored 111 goals, with at least 25 goals every season, while Irving has amassed 129 goals, including 47 in the Bruins’ 2015 season, when the team went 30-0. With both of them on the team, the Bruins have finished first, second and third in scoring in 2014, 2015 and 2016, respectively.

The pair of Bruins have combined for 65 goals this season, and their impact has been apparent in every game. Either Roelse or Irving has scored in every game this year, including four each in their last game against then-No. 2 USC (22-3, 1-2).

Neither player has seen their scoring reduced in games against USC, No. 1 Stanford (18-3, 2-1) or No. 2 California (18-2, 2-1). Since 2015, one of the pair has scored in 20 of 23 games against the three schools.

“We try to approach each possession, each shot, each stroke, each second of the game the right way,” Roelse said. “So even if it doesn’t happen once or twice, it will the next time because we approach it the right way.”

Both players are looking ahead to their games this weekend, where their consistent scoring will be put to the test once again.

Facing California this weekend in the tournament, the Bruins will go up against a close-to-even opponent, as seven of their past nine matchups with the Golden Bears have ended with a single-goal margin.

Since the Bruins’ last victory over the Golden Bears, California has gone 8-1 and outscored their opposition 124-72, including a 12-9 win over UCLA in Westwood. But UCLA coach Adam Wright does not take California’s last few games into account when looking at his team’s chances this weekend.

“It has no bearing,” Wright said. “No matter the situation, if they keep doing the right thing, then they can put themselves in a successful position.”

Irving believes a good week of training will determine how the team does against California.

“Our trainings are really indicative of how our games are gonna be on the weekend,” Irving said. “We’ve been training with the scout team all week, and they’ve been pushing us, so we should be ready.”

Both men are also close to achieving career highs in goal scoring as well.

While Irving needs 11 goals throughout the final games to tie his career high, Roelse is one goal away from setting a personal record. Irving also has a chance to jump into the top 10 in career scoring for the Bruins. If he scores 15 goals, he will pass Krsto Sbutega, who logged 143 goals from 2005-2008.

Published by Jack Perez

Perez is currently a Sports staff writer on the beach volleyball and women's water polo beats. He was previously a reporter for the gymnastics and men's water polo beats.

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