Men’s golf to represent Pac-12 at NCAA regional in Washington as title bid begins

The Bruins are the lone Pac-12 team headed to Pullman, Washington, for NCAA regionals.

UCLA men’s golf earned the No. 5 overall seed for the second year in a row to send them into the Pullman Regional at Palouse Ridge Golf Club. Two teams joining the Bruins in the 14-team field will be No. 1 Oklahoma and No. 2 Georgia Tech. After 54 holes of play, the top five teams from each region will compete in the NCAA championship, held in Fayetteville, Arkansas, from May 24 to 29.

Coach Derek Freeman led UCLA to its second NCAA championship in program history when it beat out Stanford by one stroke in 2008. At the 2018 NCAA regionals, the Bruins finished fourth with a 2-over 866, with then-freshman Devon Bling tying for eighth with a 5-under 211 and then-junior Cole Madey finishing with a 2-under 214.

Senior Patrick Murphy said the Bruins, with two wins and a runner-up finish in April, feel confident heading into potentially the last tournament of the year.

“We’re in a really good place and excited to compete at regionals,” Murphy said. “As a team, when we compete, our small mistakes are magnified in bigger events and I think we struggled with that in the fall. We (have been) working on … staying present, and I think that’s when we see our best results.”

Sophomore Eddy Lai said he has seen positive energy throughout the team, with a major shift from the beginning of the season through the Pac-12 championship.

“We all feel really really good right now and our confidence is where it should be,” Lai said. “At the beginning of the season, we always thought that we were supposed to be one of the top programs in college golf, but we didn’t play as well as we wanted to. Towards the end of the season, we started to gel together and play at the right time and I think that’s (what) helped us.

Lai said line putting was a major focus in practice leading up to the tournament because of the typically fast and blind greens on Washington State’s home course.

Freeman said the Bruins struggled with a slow start to the season, and their upward trend was due to resilience.

“First of all, we have a really long season,” said Freeman. “There’s a lot of ups and downs and I try to tell the guys to stay patient, to stay consistent, to not give up, put in the work and do the things that we have control over. I think that it takes teams longer to get into the feel and successful habits that they have; the guys have really started to gel together, and they’ve had a really successful spring. Our guys are excited and they’re ready; these are the toughest three rounds of the year and I think that their games are in good places.”

The Bruins will play at Palouse Ridge Golf Club in Pullman, Washington, for the NCAA regionals from May 13 to 15.

Bruins achieve series sweep against Cougars with season-high stats

The Bruins put their offensive firepower on display this weekend.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (41-8, 19-5 Pac-12) took down Washington State (10-36-1, 2-21-1) by scores of 6-2, 10-0 and 13-10 to earn its first road sweep of the season. The Bruins’ 29 runs and eight home runs in the series were both season highs.

“We really swung the bats well,” said coach John Savage. “Some guys really stepped up and had big weekends. It’s always difficult to sweep a Pac-12 team on the road, and we needed a lot of these runs.”

Sophomore right fielder Garrett Mitchell led off Friday’s opener with his fifth home run of the year. Mitchell finished the series with eight hits and extended his hitting streak to nine games.

After the Cougars responded with a run of their own, the Bruins retook the lead in the top of the second before Washington State tied the game again a half inning later – before a three-run rally in the fourth gave UCLA the lead for good.

With two outs and a man on third, Mitchell tallied his second RBI of the night with a single up the middle. Junior second baseman Chase Strumpf singled to right field to drive in Mitchell, and junior third baseman Ryan Kreidler scored after Cougar right fielder Jared Thurber fumbled the ball.

The Bruins added a run in the fifth to make it 6-2, a lead they would not relinquish the rest of the way.

On the mound, junior right-hander Ryan Garcia allowed just two baserunners after the second inning. He finished with two earned runs allowed in eight innings.

Redshirt junior right-hander Jack Ralston took the mound Saturday and continued where Garcia left off, tossing seven shutout innings and striking out 12. Ralston lowered his ERA to 2.34 and has not allowed a run in his last 19 innings of work.

“I liked my start,” Ralston said. “I’ve been feeling pretty comfortable up there, especially with the guys behind me.”

On offense, the Bruins tallied nine extra-base hits en route to ten runs.

Kreidler kicked off Saturday’s game with his first home run since March 22 and followed it up in the second with another extra-base hit to left center – an RBI double that put UCLA up 4-0.

Junior first baseman Michael Toglia, freshman center fielder Matt McLain and Strumpf all added homers of their own to drive in another five runs for the Bruins. For McLain, it was just his second home run of the season and his first in over two months.

With the chance to earn the series sweep Sunday, UCLA attacked early again.

In the top of the second, Toglia stepped to the plate and hit a solo shot for his 11th home run of the season, tying his total from last year.

The Cougars took their first lead of the series in the bottom of the second against freshman right-hander Jesse Bergin on a fielding error by sophomore shortstop Kevin Kendall and sacrifice bunt from second baseman Garrett Gouldsmith.

Trailing 2-1, the Bruins broke through with another fourth-inning rally. Kendall tied the game with an RBI single, and McLain launched a three-run homer to right-center for his second home run of the series.

“Everybody knows how capable (McLain) is,” Savage said. “It’s not easy for a freshman to come in and play every day. You’ve got to give him a lot of credit that he’s withstood it and had a major impact this weekend.”

Kreidler drove in the fifth run of the inning on a single to left, pushing the score to 6-2.

The Cougars responded with a rally of their own, scoring a combined six runs and batting around against Bergin, freshman right-hander Jack Filby and redshirt senior right-hander Nathan Hadley.

The score remained 8-6 until the top of the seventh, when UCLA rallied for its second five-run inning of the day. Toglia made it 8-7 with an RBI double to left-center, and a wild pitch from left-hander Tyson Guerrero brought the trying run across.

The Bruins took the lead after Toglia came home on a sacrifice fly from junior left fielder Jack Stronach and Mitchell knocked a two-run single to right.

UCLA added a pair of insurance runs late in the game, including McLain’s second home run of the game in the top of the ninth. McLain finished the series with three home runs and six RBIs after going in hitless in his previous 11 at-bats.

“It wasn’t what I was trying to do, but it felt good to come out here and get a few home runs,” McLain said.

The Cougars made one last push in the bottom of the ninth, driving in two runs and putting runners at second and third with no outs against sophomore right-hander Holden Powell. However, Powell managed to get the final three outs to help the Bruins escape with the win.

UCLA next will play at UC Irvine at 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Club Sports’ hands-off management approach allows gender discrimination of teams

Everyone hates a referee who makes unfair calls. The only thing worse is a ref who doesn’t make any calls.

Welcome to Club Sports at UCLA.

The UCLA Competitive Sports program consists of both Club and Intramural Sports. Club Sports consists of 55 different teams – including sailing, Quidditch, archery and rugby – with 2,500 participants, while the Intramural Sports program consists of 15 leagues with more than 12,000 total participants in a given year.

A lot of students choose to participate in club sports each year to pursue their athletic or gaming interests without having to be a student-athlete or someone who played the sport before college.

But UCLA Club Sports, which is responsible for helping teams with logistics like budgets, gear purchases and practice schedules, seems to do little else. It disregards issues or complaints teams might have and falls short in mediating conflicts between teams. On top of that, there are also gender disparities in how it treats teams.

Club Sports has a responsibility to oversee all clubs and work with its students to give them their money’s worth. It needs to shed its hands-off approach to managing teams, and it should instead be a reliable source that students know will support them – regardless of gender.

That clearly isn’t the case right now, though.

The sailing team’s needs are largely handled by individual athletes, with Club Sports giving little aid, said Leah Ford, a fourth-year psychology student on the sailing team.

“Our team’s relationship with Club Sports is perpetuated by how successful we are in leadership, administratively, financially and in competition,” Ford said.

Club Sports’ bystander habits cause athletes to feel like they can’t depend on the organization. This, in turn, allows gender discrimination to take place on the field.

For instance, some women’s Club Sports members who book fields for practice or play often have to quarrel with male athletes who refuse to move out of the space.

The women’s rugby team was unable to get support to address this mistreatment from male athletes even after asking Club Sports for reinforcement, said Maya Alter, a first-year world arts and cultures student and women’s rugby player.

“If there is a group of women playing pickup soccer and we ask them to leave, they do, but we have had multiple times where men are playing pickup soccer and we said we had the field, but they wouldn’t leave,” Alter said.

Club Sports even seems to have partial treatment in the little support it offers. Teams have to deal with travel on their own, and consequently face difficulties collecting funds and finding transportation.

Nicole Chavez, a third-year psychology student and rugby player, said even though Club Sports is supposed to help teams plan everything for the year at the beginning of fall quarter, her team always runs into more issues in the long-run than the male rugby team.

“I’m the travel chair (for the team), and as far as I know, no men’s team has ever had issues with getting travel, cars, buses, etc., but we run into problems with that all the time,” Chavez said.

Teams also face several challenges when it comes to purchasing new or better equipment. Club Sports determines what equipment teams are allowed to order, approves payments and receives shipments. But for some reason, it seems like only female athletes have a difficult time getting ahold of much-needed equipment.

That seems to stem from Club Sports being more willing to help male athletes than female athletes, said Cat Matel, a third-year international development studies student and women’s rugby player.

“If men’s rugby asks for more materials, Club Sports is more willing to give it to them, whereas women’s rugby has had a lot of issues getting supplies like mouth guards or getting tackle pads,” Matel said.

Alter added that there have been several cases where the men’s rugby team has taken her team’s equipment without asking and has refused to admit fault. This has resulted in the women’s rugby team members having to take their gear home so it doesn’t get stolen.

This gender bias perpetuates the inaccurate idea that female athletes aren’t as capable as male ones. Women’s teams are forced to question their worth when Club Sports disregards or doesn’t help them address their concerns – something we should not tolerate at UCLA.

Certainly, there are teams that have successfully been able to manage their logistics and itineraries themselves. This might give off the idea Club Sports should let teams handle themselves. However, the organization is there for a reason: to specifically work with club sports teams to help them play their sports. Some students choose to not seek help, but those who do should feel like they at least have the organization’s support.

Club Sports’ laid-back approach to its role has disadvantaged teams across gender lines. It’s about time it starts making some calls so athletes can bring their A-game to the field.

Editorial: UCLA Athletics’ deficiencies affect future of athletes, reputation of university

2019 has not been kind to UCLA Athletics.

The department has been surrounded by federal investigations and fallout from the Varsity Blues college admissions scandal, a hectic search for a new men’s basketball head coach, backlash from students for the announcement of a new athlete-only academic center and revelations that it admitted subpar players if parents gave fat donations to the university.

It’s gotten so bad that Bruins barely celebrated for a week about UCLA winning its 117th NCAA title before they got another reminder of UCLA Athletics’ deficiencies.

The NCAA released a report Wednesday measuring the Academic Progress Rates of Division I schools for the 2017-2018 school year. The findings were worse than you would expect: UCLA’s football team boasted the lowest APR score in the Pac-12 and the men’s basketball team’s score was just three points above the limit to avoid a postseason ban.

Some champions we make here.

The report only backs up a long-held belief that collegiate sports and academics are incompatible – a truth former UCLA athletes like Josh Rosen, now a Miami Dolphins quarterback, revealed while they were students.

But the NCAA’s findings also shed light on something that’s been on the back of Bruins’ minds since the college admissions scandal: how far UCLA Athletics has fallen.

Students and alumni have become increasingly numb to constant sports scandals plaguing UCLA. The institution that once boasted one of the best college athletics teams in the country, now sees its big-name teams falling from the rankings, its athletics administrators permitting bribery via donations and its coaches illegally being bribed. Reform is a gargantuan effort at this point – one that might entail heads rolling.

These pitiful APR scores are no fluke – the men’s basketball team’s 933 score is only the latest data point on what’s been a steady decline of its APR scores over the past five years. These scores reveal a disappointing truth of how little UCLA actually values the education of its most popular athletes.

The irony is the NCAA report comes after UCLA Athletics announced it would create a student-athlete center to help its players. The promises of a shiny new building ring hollow when it’s clear the administrators never really prioritized the academic success of students in the first place. These students have spoken chapter and verse about how the rigorous athletics regimen means they have to skip classes, make up exams and bank on tutoring services to pass their courses – hardly the makings of a successful academic career.

But no one’s surprised at this point. UCLA Athletics Director Dan Guerrero’s track record speaks for itself.

Administrative oversight allowed parents to bribe their kids’ ways into the school through covert payments as a part of the Varsity Blues scandal or even long before the scandal. A pitifully conducted search for a men’s basketball coach saw UCLA fail to pay the buyout for TCU coach Jamie Dixon’s contract, its initial choice for a coaching candidate. And Guerrero’s tenure has seen a steady decline of some of UCLA’s highest revenue-earning and once-great sports programs like men’s basketball and football.

An academic center won’t help student-athletes be better students. Building up a larger donor base won’t stop rich parents from cashing out to UCLA and the university admitting their kids in return. And slapping the wrists of current administrators won’t make UCLA Athletics the ranking athletics program it once was.

The university’s flagship Division I program has plummeted from grace. The least UCLA can do is stop John Wooden’s legacy from further bathing in the gutter.

Dan Navarro discusses growth in music career starting with his time at UCLA

Dan Navarro, a UCLA alumnus, returned to campus in 2005 for a guest appearance after kicking off his music career.

At the end of the class, students formed a line that stretched to the back door of the lecture hall waiting to talk to him, said Peter Rutenberg, Navarro’s longtime friend.

Over the course of his career, Navarro and his late music partner, Eric Lowen, have written songs for Pat Benatar, The Bangles, TKA, Jackson Browne and The Temptations. In addition to singing and songwriting, Navarro has also been the voice of various characters in television shows and movies, including “American Dad!” and “Family Guy.” He started his music career as a student at UCLA, ultimately pursuing music full time. Navarro held a concert at Fiddlers Crossing and performed Saturday at the venue in Tehachapi, California.

“I didn’t go to law school, get a master’s – I decided to pursue artistry for a couple of years, and that couple of years turned into 10. I cracked it at the 10-year mark,” Navarro said. “And then all of a sudden I was in this career.”

[RELATED: Alumnus composes original score for Emmy-nominated ‘Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’]

Navarro first came to UCLA in 1969 and wanted to pursue a degree in the theater arts program. It was not until Navarro’s second year on campus when he joined the Men’s Glee Club, when an upperclassman realized his musical potential, he said. Navarro trusted him and changed his major to music, he said, and after five years at UCLA, he left campus in 1974 to pursue the art.

“When I came to UCLA, my first attempt was to be a theater arts major. I thought I wanted to act and sing,” Navarro said. “I didn’t know how to play the piano. I didn’t know how to play the guitar. I didn’t know how to play a harmony instrument.”

His next few jobs were all related to music. In December 1977, he worked as a singing waiter at the Great American Food & Beverage Co., where he met Lowen, his lifelong singing and songwriting partner.

Ten years after he started his musical career, he and Lowen accidentally wrote the hit song, “We Belong.” At the time, Navarro was angry at Lowen and stopped talking to him for six weeks. Out of the blue, Lowen called Navarro and they wrote “We Belong” in 90 minutes, which changed the course of their musical career, Navarro said. The pair took the track to publishers, and music producer Tom Sturges suggested pitching the song to Benatar.

web.ae.dannavarro.EN.picB.jpg
After attending UCLA for five years as a music student, Dan Navarro accidentally wrote the hit song "We Belong," which reached the top five on the charts all over the world 13 months later. (Emily Ng/Daily Bruin)

Navarro said Benatar received the box of tapes from her record company and selected the duo’s song. It was the first song released on Benatar’s sixth album, which was released in October of 1984, Navarro said. Almost 13 months after they wrote “We Belong,” it reached the top five on the charts all over the world, Navarro said.

Navarro recently came out with his very first album titled “Shed My Skin” in March. Steve Postell, who produced the album, met Navarro 30 years ago when Navarro was working with Lowen. After Lowen’s death in 2012, Postell said he watched Navarro grow and evolve as a solo artist.

“I feel like he’s really come into his own and how he reinvented himself after being a part of this collaboration for 20 years,” Postell said.

Lowen died from Lou Gehrig’s disease, officially known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, in 2012, bringing Lowen and Navarro’s musical collaboration to an end after 20 years of working together in the industry.

[RELATED: Students channel their own stories to refresh well-known songs for cabaret shows]

Rutenberg, who is also an alumnus and Grammy-award winning artist, said he sang with Navarro during his time at UCLA. Some of his earliest memories of Navarro are from their Glee Club days, he said. He said he noticed Navarro was always a fine songwriter because he has an ability to tell a story in song.

“Anyone listening to the song can find something to relate to and I think that’s probably at the heart of what made him a popular and long-lasting songwriter,” Rutenberg said.

Today, Navarro mentors many young artists and the one piece of advice he always tells his students is to always follow their heart, be genuine to themselves and be genuine to their art, he said. The music which he wrote from his soul were the songs that made him the most successful, Navarro said.

“Don’t keep trying to chase style. Don’t keep trying to create something you think will sell,” Navarro said. “Create something that moves you inside.”

New symposium blends narratives of riots, city planning

This post was updated on May 15 at 4:42 p.m.

Jacqueline Barrios used a Charles Dickens novel to retell the history of the 1992 Los Angeles riots.

Using the 1780 Gordon Riots in London as depicted in Dickens’ “Barnaby Rudge,” the English graduate student taught her high school students from the James A. Foshay Learning Center to explore their riot-impacted neighborhood of South LA. Students collected sounds including background noises from the city and interviews with community members. Barrios’ curriculum was eventually transformed into an exhibit titled “LA 1992/London 1780: Sounding Out the Crowd,” which will be on display May 24 at the Salon 02 symposium in Perloff Hall.

The Salon 02 symposium will span three days with exhibits May 24, panels May 25 and a picnic May 26, all centered around the word “plan,” which conventionally encompasses listing out actions to achieve goals, Barrios said. Organized by alumni and current students in the Urban Humanities Initiative, the symposium aims to showcase interdisciplinary, collaborative work while challenging the concept of a plan, the co-organizer said. Barrios’ project is one of many that will be hosted at the Salon as a whole.

“When I say plans are normative, they are meant to organize a whole bunch of diverse energies into some material reality. But we know from our studies that plans go awry,” Barrios said. “What we’re asking people to think about is how do we continue to live with plans and how do we – people who live in cities, make cities – how can we challenge that.”

[RELATED: UCLA lecturer compiles centuries of LA perspectives in ‘Dear Los Angeles’]

In the panel “Mapping the Plan,” panelists will discuss how maps can disrupt plans, such as gentrification, and challenge the status quo, said Gus Wendel, an Urban Humanities Initiative alumnus, event co-organizer and panel moderator. Policies that facilitate gentrification will transform neighborhoods. But a map that adds information to data sets about eviction rates, for instance, can slow the process by informing planners’ conversations or sparking action from advocacy groups, Barrios said.

“(It’s) rethinking how city planners can take into account aspects of narrative and how they plan cities,” Barrios said. “A short story might have sensuality or sensory experiences of a city – how does that factor into city planning?”

web.ae.urbanhumanities.courtesy.jpg
The exhibit "LA 1992/London 1780: Sounding out the Crowd" will be on display May 24 at Salon 02 in Perloff Hall. The symposium will span three days, with exhibits on May 24, panels on May 25 and picnic on May 26. (Courtesy of Jacqueline Barrios)

In Barrios’ exhibit, side-by-side panels will display headsets containing her students’ sound recordings of South LA – especially areas impacted by the 1992 riots. Panels adjacent to the headsets display pictures of the London riots, said Kenny Wong, who worked with Barrios on the exhibit.

When looking down from a certain angle, the panels reveal only pictures of the Gordon Riots. The other perspective reveals bystanders at a billowing cloud of smoke on Vermont Avenue during the LA riots, added Wong, a graduate student of architecture and urban design and regional planning. By adding in perspective to the display, activities that ensue from a riot no longer seem clear-cut, he added.

“I like putting them in conversation with each other because one is … bodies upon bodies, mayhem happening. But this other scene of Los Angeles … it’s not just a newsreel of people looting, the tragic loss of life,” Wong said. “That was my way of offering a counter-reading of what to think of the riots today especially with these students that are living in the area where it happened.”

[RELATED: Architects discuss building around urban environment, natural terrain]

Although riots disrupt plans, Barrios said, they also grant insights into the formation of counterplans, like they did in 1992. At the time, South LA faced strict policing, racial segregation and a history of economic disinvestment, she said – the riots served as a measure to curb this inequitable treatment.

In addition to the panels, the exhibit includes CDs created by Barrios’ students and a map of downtown and South LA. For the collection of CDs, students recorded sounds, burned them onto a CD and created the album art. A group of students, for example, recorded interviews with their teachers about the killing of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins during the riots. Titled “The Last Remembrance,” the CD keeps Harlins’ memory alive through the various stories and forces people to consider how such memories reveal her significance within her community, Wong said.

For the physical map, students documented areas where they recorded sounds, where damages were publicly reported during the riots and where community members recalled memories of the riots, Wong said. It connected feelings, thoughts and conversations regarding the riots to a particular location – the James A. Foshay Learning Center, which is situated at the center of reported damages, he said.

“I’m sure it became of this way of relating, realizing your relationship to where all this stuff happened,” Wong said.

Through her exhibition, Barrios said she aims to emphasize that learning and planning is associated with communities. Not only can the Gordon Riots be used to study riots today, but also to uncover a community’s knowledge, she said.

“I think part of the project is illustrating that (the students’) voice and production is the only reason why we should study Dickens in the first place,” Barrios said. “(It gives) them the opportunity to be storytellers of their historical moments.”