Women’s tennis doubles prove successful with both new and old pairings

The Bruins win twice as often when they pick up the doubles point.

No. 9 UCLA women’s tennis (18-7, 8-2 Pac-12) is .400 when it loses the doubles point, but .800 when it is the first team to put a point on the scoreboard.

Coach Stella Sampras Webster’s squad started doubles dual play clinching the point in their first five matches. Then, it hit a snag, dropping the point in five of its next seven matches. Since then, the Bruins have attained the opening point 13 times in a row.

“It’s great to have three teams that have a chance to win,” Sampras Webster said. “It takes a lot of pressure off of each other.”

UCLA’s doubles lineups boast three top-50 ranked duos – No. 4 combination of seniors Gabby Andrews and Ayan Broomfield, No. 12 duo of freshman Elysia Bolton and redshirt junior Jada Hart and No. 48 duo of sophomore Abi Altick and senior Alaina Miller.

The third doubles team has been in constant flux as Sampras Webster has elected to experiment with different combinations.

“I really like our one and two doubles teams,” Sampras Webster said before the Pepperdine matchup in early April. “We’ve had some good wins and they’re solid, but we might mix (freshman Taylor Johnson) a bit in there and see what that brings.”

Since then, each possible combination of Johnson, Miller and Altick have played on third court doubles. Sampras Webster opted to go with the duo of Johnson and Altick for the Pac-12 championship, even though the duo did not play together during the last four matches of the regular season.

The pair won all three of its matches in the tournament and is 9-1 on the season.

“We just came out (with) really good energy,” Altick said. “Me and Taylor played really well this weekend so hopefully we can keep that going.”

The Bruins’ sole returning doubles team from last year – Broomfield and Andrews – has manned the top doubles court for the majority of the season, notching a 7-4 record on court one.

The friendship between the seniors has aided the Bruins in unexpected ways according to Andrews.

In UCLA’s Pac-12 championship semifinal match against No. 11 Washington, Broomfield was locked in a three-setter in singles with the score tied three apiece after tweaking her knee in doubles play.

“Me and (Broomfield) have this dynamic where I have to be on her court and vice versa (during singles),” Andrews said. “We play doubles together. We’re probably best friends. When we’re on the court together, it’s literally like two people against the one person on the other side of the net. We locked in and I was encouraging her and we were feeding each other. It was the best thing I’ve ever seen.”

Broomfield ended up pulling out a 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-1 victory to send UCLA to the Pac-12 championship finals.

Baseball sends waves of pitchers upon Pepperdine in midweek win

It was a joint effort on the mound for the Bruins.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (35-7, 14-4 Pac-12) took down Pepperdine (19-18, 10-8 West Coast Conference) 8-5 on Tuesday, using seven pitchers along the way.

With sophomore right-hander Zach Pettway out with a forearm strain, coach John Savage had to rearrange his rotation, slotting freshman right-hander Sean Mullen in for his first collegiate start. He threw three shutout innings before Savage pulled him from the game.

According to Mullen, this was the strategy going into the game.

“The plan was to limit my pitch count because I hadn’t been used in the starter role,” Mullen said. “You don’t want to just go out and blow the doors in, you want to be smart about it.”

On offense, the Bruins provided early run support for the rookie pitcher.

In the top of the second, senior designated hitter Jake Pries stepped up to the plate for his first at-bat against the Waves since his freshman year. He gave the Bruins a 1-0 lead with one swing of the bat, launching his seventh homer of the year deep to left field.

“The starting pitcher threw me a fastball that I just missed on the first pitch,” Pries said. “Then he threw me a little slider that kind of hung, and I put a good swing on it.”

UCLA extended its lead in the third after sophomore right fielder Garrett Mitchell reached base on an infield single and junior third baseman Ryan Kreidler drove him in with his team leading 12th double of the year. Kreidler advanced to third on the throw home and scored on a sacrifice fly from junior left fielder Jack Stronach.

The Bruins scored again in the fourth and put two more across in the fifth to make it four consecutive innings with at least one run, pushing their lead to 6-0.

“I thought this was one of our more consistent games of the year,” Pries said. “We had no really big inning, but we kind of just chipped away the whole game.”

On the mound, sophomore right-hander Michael Townsend took over for Mullen in the bottom of the fourth and pitched a 1-2-3 inning. However, Townsend ran into trouble when he came back out for the fifth and surrendered a two-out RBI double to second baseman Wyatt Young, followed by a throwing error from Kreidler that put two runners on.

Freshman right-hander Jack Filby replaced Townsend as the Bruins’ third pitcher of the day and gave up his first home run of the year to Brandt Belk on a three-run shot that made it 6-4.

UCLA responded in the top of the sixth with a two-out rally of its own. Mitchell reached first with his third hit of the game, stole second and scored on an RBI single from junior second baseman Chase Strumpf.

In the bottom of the sixth, the pitching staff faced its tightest situation of the game after junior right-hander Felix Rubi took over for Filby with two runners on. Back-to-back singles put another run across for the Waves and loaded the bases with just one out for Young.

However, Rubi got the double play ball on the first pitch, ending the inning and preserving the Bruins’ 7-5 lead.

“Rubi is a ground ball guy and he got the ground ball right at the right time,” Savage said. “That was the pivotal play of the game.”

UCLA scored for the sixth straight inning in the top of the seventh, this time on a bases-loaded groundout from sophomore shortstop Kevin Kendall that made it 8-5.

Working with a three-run cushion, the Bruins turned the game over to their late-inning relievers in the bottom of the seventh. Redshirt senior right-hander Nathan Hadley, junior right-hander Kyle Mora and sophomore right-hander Holden Powell combined to close out the game with three hitless innings.

“Sometimes it’s a luxury that we take for granted, giving the ball to those guys every night and knowing that they’re going to put us in a really good position to win,” Mullen said. “They don’t get enough credit for what they do for our team, because having guys like that really eases minds.”

UCLA will next play a three-game series at Arizona State starting Friday at 7 p.m.

After taking five MPSF awards, women’s water polo heads to NCAA tournament

As they await the start of the NCAA championship, the Bruins have collected their final regular season accolades.

No. 3 UCLA women’s water polo (23-6, 4-2 MPSF) had five players selected to the All-MPSF teams last week before its eventual third-place finish in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation championship.

Junior attacker Maddie Musselman was the Bruins’ lone All-MPSF First Team member, her third straight year earning the honor.

Musselman has scored 55 goals for the Bruins this season, 21 more than anyone else on the team. She has scored at least three goals in eight games this year, including three games in which she scored five goals.

However, coach Adam Wright said Musselman is not only valuable on the attack.

“(Musselman) moves so well,” Wright said. “No one talks about the things she does for us defensively. She was able to bounce back from tougher games and she puts us in a position to be successful.”

Junior attacker Bronte Halligan was voted to the All-MPSF Second Team for the first time in her career. Halligan is third on the team in goals scored with 31, with four coming in three games against rival No. 2 USC.

Senior goalie Carlee Kapana was selected as an All-MPSF Honorable Mention, her third time finishing the season on one of the All-MPSF teams. Kapana has logged 208 saves through 25 starts with a goals against average of 6.65.

She has double-digit saves in 10 games this season, with five of those coming against rivals USC, No. 1 Stanford and No. 4 California.

Kapana said her approach in the net has not changed since she arrived here in Westwood, which has allowed her to consistently be one of the league’s top goalies.

“It’s basically about staying present throughout the whole game,” Kapana said. “Having in the back of my mind who their best shooters are and mainly trying to react.”

Freshmen attacker Val Ayala and center Ava Johnson both landed on the MPSF All-Newcomer team. Ayala is second on the team in scoring with 34 goals and has five hat tricks – including one in her first-ever collegiate game.

Johnson has the fifth-most goals for the Bruins with 20. She had four goals in the first game of the Triton Invitational, a 17-2 win over Santa Clara on Feb. 9.

Wright said the maturity he has seen from his young team this season has put the Bruins in a spot to compete for the championship at the end of the year.

“We’ve come a long ways in the last 50-plus days,” Wright said. “I really believe we can clean some things up and we can put ourselves in a position to have a chance. And that’s all we want – a chance.”

The Bruins’ stars will be on display as they start their path toward the title against No. 6 Michigan on May 10. Musselman said focusing on the small aspects of the game will be key in the Bruins’ hunt for the championship.

“Sometimes we get distracted from the little details, body position, fundamental skills,” Musselman said. “Going into the NCAAs, the little details will probably be the difference in all the games we will be playing.”

Beach volleyball ready to make another run through elimination bracket if needed

Last May, the Bruins became the first collegiate team to win the NCAA title through the elimination bracket.

Last weekend, UCLA beach volleyball (31-3) entered the elimination bracket in the Pac-12 championship after losing to USC (28-4), and won the elimination bracket final – but lost to the Trojans again in the championship final.

UCLA will travel to Gulf Shores, Alabama, as the No. 2 seed this week to defend its national title, with the possibility of making another run through the elimination bracket.

Winning a double-elimination tournament often requires facing the same team twice – something coach Stein Metzger said is difficult to do.

“Any time two good teams go to battle, it’s hard for any team to win twice in a row,” Metzger said.

Then-No. 4 seed Florida State defeated then-No. 1 seed UCLA in the second round of last year’s NCAA championship, sending the Bruins to the elimination bracket. The Bruins bounced back and won three matches in a row to earn a spot in the national championship against the Seminoles.

Senior Sarah Sponcil said there are advantages to coming out of the elimination bracket.

“We love coming out of the contender’s bracket,” Sponcil said. “We get to play a match in the morning, and (the winner of the winner’s bracket) is going to be able to maybe sit around. So they’re not going to have as much momentum.”

UCLA made it out of the elimination bracket in last weekend’s Pac-12 championship with a sweep of California on Saturday morning, but was unable to beat USC the second time around, despite having that momentum.

But junior Savvy Simo and sophomore transfer Lea Monkhouse bounced back on court four in Saturday’s final after losing to the Trojans on Friday.

Simo said the extra game Saturday morning – courtesy of the elimination bracket – helped the pair regain its stride.

“I think having a game in the morning to warm us up was good just to get our confidence back after the loss (Friday), because it was pretty brutal,” Simo said.

Should UCLA and No. 1 seed USC win their first two matches this weekend, the two teams will meet for the sixth time this season – of which the Trojans have won the last three – in the winner’s bracket final.

The loser will drop to the elimination bracket, where it will play one match for a chance compete against the winner in the NCAA championship.

Metzger said he is confident despite the losses suffered last weekend.

“(USC) seems to play a good 10 to 20% better at home,” Metzger said. “We’re looking forward to playing them on neutral territory, and I like our chances.”

Convoluted club applications inhibit ability of students to join organizations

When incoming freshmen arrive at UCLA for Bruin Day, they are immediately told there are more than 1,000 clubs they can join.

What they aren’t told is they probably won’t get into most of them.

Joining many of the most popular and desirable clubs on campus involves filling out an extensive application. And every club gets to make its own application with multiple stages to it. Some require resumes, cover letters, essays and portfolios. Some students even have to face multiple rounds of interviews, just to be among the single-digit percentage of students who get into a club.

But student organizations don’t get to make all the rules – the university still has a set of policies they must follow to even operate.

Student organizations are required to register through the Student Organizations, Leadership & Engagement Office, which registers new clubs and advises them on rules and regulations. Students must get three signatories, write a short description and create a constitution that states the logistics of voting privileges, finances and organizational structure.

But what’s missing here is how applications for new members will be made and what recruitment will be like.

The office does not help regulate student organizations’ application processes, which can make joining clubs more complicated than it should be. When every club does something different, it’s confusing, especially to first years who suddenly have to juggle 10 different types of applications on 10 different websites.

SOLE needs to regulate the application process for clubs that require students to apply before joining. There should be a standardized structure for clubs to handle applications and a centralized place for those applications to be made public. This increased oversight would make student organizations more accessible to students and take stress out of applying to clubs.

Katherine Alvarado, a UCLA spokesperson, said the SOLE Office does not regulate clubs and has not really had any problems with the small percentage of organizations that use applications. Ultimately, SOLE doesn’t know if regulating clubs is necessary.

But even a small percentage of the nearly 1,300 clubs is a large number. It’s especially important to note that some clubs can get hundreds of applicants a quarter, so to say that student organization applications are not prevalent isn’t true.

There’s quite a lot of variance in how clubs handle their applications. One can entail submitting a resume, essay and five short answers while another can have three long responses, a cover letter and a visual portfolio.

Leo Siow, a third-year computer engineering student, spent at least an hour on every application he filled out.

“These apps take a long time simply because they ask for a short answer and an essay,” Siow said. “Some even have tech challenges and coding interviews. Those take even longer.”

Students have expressed concerns about the elitism and exclusivity of campus organizations like student business clubs, so it’s evident SOLE needs to set clearer guidelines for clubs. If the clubs that do have applications already conduct their recruitment in a fair and accessible manner, then these regulations should be no big deal to them.

Moreover, applications are posted on each club’s website, which decreases accessibility for students. Each application comes with its own obstacles and hoops to jump through, limiting the opportunities students have to apply to all the clubs they want.

Tanmyaa MacDougall, a second-year international development studies student, said she has applied to up to 75 clubs and received mostly rejections.

“When you go on tours at UCLA, they’re like, ‘Oh, this is a collaborative environment,’” MacDougall said. “They talk about the 1,000 clubs on campus. I thought after so many rounds of applying something would happen.”

The lack of club accessibility can also affect students’ educational experiences.

Ayushi Shroff, a second-year neuroscience student, said applying to clubs was extremely stressful and made her question her self-worth.

“In terms of my experience at UCLA, it is disheartening (to be rejected from) things I wanted to explore,” Shroff said. “It makes you question if this is a field I’m meant to go into.”

It’s clear the SOLE Office should take a more active role in making the club recruitment process more accessible. Students would have a far less stressful time joining student organizations if club applications were all in one place and had a standardized format, as well as a standardized or recommended timespan for when to respond to applicants.

While it’s true that different clubs have a right to choose how to get the best applicants, that doesn’t mean they need to be unfair or compromise True Bruin Values in their recruitment. Centralizing the application process doesn’t mean these organizations would lose out on their individuality – it merely makes it easier for students to discover campus clubs.

Until that happens, though, there will be a lot of sad faces after the activities fair come fall quarter.

Arbitrary definitions and quotas are barring businesses that would boom in Westwood

Westwood’s casual drinkers can rest easy: Their new choices for a relaxed, inviting destination are a rowdy tavern and a bar that blasts music from the early 2000s.

Sepi’s, a casual pub and sub shop in Westwood, closed its doors Tuesday. To say there was an uproar would be an understatement. Sepi’s has been a Westwood favorite for 50 years and its closure seems to be only the most recent battle in the war between older Westwood residents and UCLA students.

The bar’s troubles started when its owners were told the building they occupied would undergo construction. And so they searched Westwood Village for another location, but to no avail.

But even if Sepi’s had gotten approval for an alcohol license at a new venue, it would have had to get a variance to operate as a “fast-food restaurant” – something that could be easily blocked by residents.

The reason: the Westwood Village Specific Plan, a 1989 zoning ordinance under the Los Angeles General Plan that was most recently amended in 2004.

Sepi’s will only be another tragedy in the common tale of businesses struggling to open in Westwood – like Tocaya Organica, Tender Greens and 800 Degrees – until the Village updates the specific plan’s definition of fast-food restaurants, gets rid of its quotas on the kinds of permitted businesses and eliminates arcane things like its parking requirements.

The specific plan classifies any restaurant that uses disposable utensils and packaging, charges guests before they eat or posts a sign with its prices as “fast food.”

“Basically anything less formal like Tender Greens or 800 Degrees is considered fast food,” said Michael Skiles, Westwood Forward leader and president of the North Westwood Neighborhood Council. “It seems ridiculous, but even Starbucks is considered fast food.”

The plan does not make distinctions between the various types of restaurants, ranging from proper fast food like Taco Bell to places like Sepi’s that clearly don’t involve fast-moving food.

To add fuel to the fire, the specific plan outlines quotas on the number of fast food restaurants allowed in the Village. It’s near impossible for a nonupscale restaurant to open in Westwood given the specific plan sets a maximum of 40 fast food restaurants, and nearly every type of restaurant, barring Napa Valley Grille, is considered fast food. That’s precisely why Sepi’s found it difficult to move elsewhere in the Village without going through an appeals process.

The quota is egregious, since students drive the economy in Westwood and cheap food and alcohol are arguably the primary sustenance of college students. While Sepi’s could potentially get a variance, the process is long and expensive, with no guarantee the business would eventually win.

Not only is the specific plan’s quota out of touch with the reality of economic demands in Westwood, but it unduly empowers other residents to oppose all kinds of restaurants, since they can easily appeal any nonsit-down restaurant trying to find a place in Westwood.

And their appeals actually have grounds, since, according to the specific plan, Westwood is oversaturated with fast food restaurants – oversaturated, that is, with casual mom and pop pubs that have been here for 50 years.

“Our specific plan – rather than (supporting) the business community – is actually discouraging tenanting,” said Andrew Thomas, the Westwood Village Improvement Association’s executive director. “And now Sepi’s cannot move in a district that has high vacancy.”

The final nail in Sepi’s coffin was the specific plan’s parking requirement. Thomas said since Sepi’s was trying to move to an area that is designated as retail, it would have to provide parking or sign a deal with a parking garage. Westwood is a college town and students mostly walk or ride-share around the Village, so the parking requirement is really just an arbitrary barrier to tenanting.

It’s clear the specific plan is archaic and only serving to worsen Westwood’s economic vitality. Sepi’s is not the first business to shut its doors because of the shortcomings of the plan, nor will it be the last if certain residents continue to have their way.

While neighborhood councils certainly have a vested interest and right to regulate business in their districts, the specific plan simply gives Westwood residents too much power to bar nearly all kinds of businesses that would be successful in the Village.

In fact, this community input and the requirements set out in the specific plan have only contributed to high vacancy rates and failing businesses that have permeated Westwood for years.

Thomas said Westwood’s vacancy rate is 16%, which is a clear indicator of the specific plan’s failures. Sepi’s inability to reopen nearby only worsens an already bleak situation for businesses in Westwood.

It’s time for a reality check of what businesses will actually thrive in a college town like Westwood – and not so shockingly, fast, casual restaurants and establishments like Sepi’s are the ones that do.

For now, though, students will have to make do with AMF’s at Rocco’s and “fast food” like Tender Greens.

Musical ‘A Journey of Angels’ brings Armenian genocide survivor’s story to stage

A developing musical will share the story of one girl who survived the Armenian genocide.

Titled “A Journey of Angels,” the production focuses on 14-year-old Flora, who is deported to the Syrian desert during the Armenian genocide. The play is based on the book “My Mother’s Voice,” written by UCLA alumna Kay Mouradian, and the character Flora is based on Mouradian’s own mother. Mouradian said she was initially unwilling to write a book about her mother’s experience, but after conducting research and learning more about it, she discovered a newfound motivation to share her family’s personal history.

“I actually followed the deportation route from my mother’s village and the Syrian desert. I saw the last remaining descendent of the family (that rescued my mother), and she knew all about my mom,” Mouradian said. “It was like finding a needle in the haystack – there was a story that needed to be told.”

During World War I, the Ottoman Empire sided with the Central Powers and failed to capture Baku, Azerbaijan, from Russian forces. The Empire blamed Armenians for siding with the Russians and in 1915, began executing Armenians. Soon, the Empire deported Armenians and forced them on death marches across the Syrian desert, where many of them died from starvation and exposure to the harsh environment.

As a child, Mouradian said she was disinterested with her mother’s many stories of the genocide. She only started to read into the history when her mother entered her 80s and faced near-death experiences. After each experience, Mouradian said her mother somehow came back more mentally alert and amiable toward others. As her mother continuously recovered, Mouradian eventually felt she needed to look into the genocide, eventually leading to “My Mother’s Voice.”

“When I realized the stuff that was happening to her was very unusual, that’s when I started my research,” Mouradian said. “It was really the research that drove me to write the book ‘My Mother’s Voice.’”

[RELATED: Alumna’s book shines light on forgotten history of Armenian genocide]

The process of transitioning from book to musical began at a luncheon honoring people’s work on genocide, Mouradian said. Two of the honorees, Brent Beerman and his wife Kathi Chaplar, created a series of workshops to teach students about 20th century genocide, focusing on the Armenian genocide. Beerman said Mouradian approached them and gave them her book. From there, he began writing the musical and teaching the book in his English class at Crescenta Valley High School, which has a large Armenian population. Before he taught the book, Beerman said Mouradian spoke to his class, and one student asked what the Armenian genocide actually was. It was then that he realized how few non-Armenian students knew of the important historical event, he said.

“The fact that they knew so very little of it really pushed the idea that they needed to be aware of their culture that surrounded them,” Beerman said.

When collaborating with Mouradian, Beerman said they worked together to combine or trim multiple events into one moment or scene. In the book, several chapters detail Flora’s marriage to an American Armenian, but in the production, the information is condensed into one scene that shows Flora leaving her village to go to America. This scene focuses on her survival at large, instead of the intricate details that brought her from her village to the States.

“When you’re adapting something, you want to get the essence of the characters – their changes, their goals – and the essence of what the plot is,” Beerman said. “When it’s all over, you want your audience to have the same feeling that a reader does after reading the book.”

Alongside Beerman, Chaplar, the musical director, also taught Mouradian’s novel at Crescenta Valley. In order to tell the story of a genocide that is both culture- and time-specific, she had to capture that in the music, Chaplar said. She researched traditional Armenian folk music and studied the chord structure and melodic progressions, emphasizing the sounds in scenes during which the dialogue is not enough to convey a particular sentiment.

[RELATED: Musician’s unique performance blends Armenian folk, jazz improvisation]

For example, when Flora and her family prepare for deportation, the music focuses only on Flora’s family. The scene shows three generations of women storing their jewelry in the hems of their clothing in preparation to leave. However, the music eventually shifts from the family to the entire cast on stage, who echo the same melody. By changing the focus, the music symbolically indicates that the genocide was not an isolated incident, but an event that affected the entire Armenian population, Chaplar said.

Even though the production is still in development, it has been performed at Crescenta Valley twice. Mouradian said after the first performance, many of the cast members approached and thanked her for the opportunity to tell her mother’s story.

“Both (Beerman) and I felt a tremendous responsibility to do this right and to do this justice because these are real people,” Chaplar said. “It’s this balance of truth and fiction and trying to be true to the story.”