W. swimming: Swim team aims to drown USC

Speeding down the home stretch of the 2003-2004 swimming and
diving season could not be more exciting for the UCLA team. Coach
Cyndi Gallagher’s Bruins (7-2, 4-2 Pac-10) have already
proven themselves against some of the top competition in the
country, with an upset victory against No. 3 Stanford on Jan. 30
and a win at the Texas A&M Invitational in December.

Now, in the team’s final home dual meet of the season
““ its final chance to prepare for the defense its 2003 Pac-10
tournament title ““ No. 9 UCLA gets to face off against its
archrival, No. 8 USC. The Trojans have won the last 10 matchups
between the two teams.

“There is a lot of Bruin pride involved in winning this
meet,” Gallagher said. “We know it is not only a big
meet for us, but beating ‘SC is big for our alumni, our
athletic department and our school. We know how big this meet
is.”

Recent history is not exactly on the Bruins’ side. The
swim and dive squad is only 13-15 against the Trojans since 1975,
and recent history is even more bleak. But history is not much of a
concern for Gallagher.

“We are a better team than I have had in a long
time,” Gallagher said. “We are swimming really well
right now.”

A win against ‘SC would be a gigantic morale boost for
UCLA as they prepare to enter the Pac-10 Championships on Feb. 25.
In 2003, the Bruins went into the Pac-10 championships with a 2-4
conference record; They won the tournament. This year, UCLA will
come in as a far better team, and a win against USC would do more
than merely improve the Bruins’ record. A second upset of a
highly-ranked team would also greatly improve their confidence.

In the win over Stanford, UCLA received a major boost from the
dive team, which outscored Stanford 21-17. If they are to upset the
Trojans, the Bruins will again need a first-rate performance from
sophomore Sara Clark, who won the three-meter platform against
Stanford.

“I don’t think that we have to do anything different
than what we have done so far this season,” diving coach Tom
Stebbins said. “I am really pleased with how we have been
training lately, and I am excited to go at it and duke it out with
USC.”

The Bruins have recently enjoyed an appropriate atmosphere for a
home swim meet. In past years, sparse crowds have watched UCLA
compete at the Sunset Recreation Center, a lackluster venue for
competition. In 2004, the Bruins have competed at the Student
Activities Center pool, a more cozy setting that fills up for big
meets.

“Finally,” Gallagher said. “After so many
years, we have a real home-pool advantage.”

The Trojans may soon find out how loud a home-pool advantage can
be.

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