Un-Connon Opinions: As UCLA falls behind in the NCAA titles race, adding more teams is imperative

For UCLA fans, championship No. 117 must have been a relief.

The Bruins won three NCAA championships last school year – men’s water polo, women’s gymnastics and beach volleyball. But up until this weekend, there hadn’t been a single one this year.

Beach volleyball pulled through again to get UCLA back on the board, but that wasn’t before Stanford built a comfortable lead.

After winning championships in women’s volleyball, women’s swimming and men’s gymnastics this year, the Cardinal were able to bump their total to 120.

I’ll go ahead and state the obvious: UCLA does not have men’s gymnastics.

After budget cuts in 1993, the program was dissolved despite winning national championships in 1984 and 1987. But men’s gymnastics isn’t the only Cardinal team that doesn’t have a Bruin counterpart.

Stanford boasts 36 varsity athletic programs, essentially dwarfing the 23 that UCLA Athletics funds. Men’s swimming has accounted for eight of the Cardinals’ championships, another sport that fell victim to budget cuts at UCLA despite winning a championship in 1982.

There are two reasons for Stanford’s advantage on this front. First, obviously, is funding. For context, UCLA’s endowment is $5 billion.

Stanford’s endowment is $26.5 billion.

Now, not all of that goes into athletics, but the fact that Stanford basically has five times the resources and no oversight from the greater University of California system makes athletic funding much easier

The next reason is Title IX.

Title IX is a federal civil rights law that extends far beyond the world of sports, but in relation to athletics, it requires equal opportunities for male and female athletes on campus. That means that the school has to offer an identical amount of athletic scholarships to its men’s and women’s teams.

Naturally, since there is no women’s football, there are either going to be some women’s-only sports or some intensely complex scholarship distribution patterns. So if UCLA was to add or take away a men’s sport, it would have to do the same with a women’s team.

I know that not all 31,000 undergraduate students care about UCLA having the most national championships in the country as much as I do – it was one of the school’s major selling points when I visited campus and did tours during orientation. UCLA claims to be the best of the best, but it’s losing one of its major claims to fame.

So with the two hurdles of funding and Title IX, how can the Bruins find a way to pull back ahead of the Cardinal?

Funding is tricky, considering the student backlash following UCLA Athletics’ announcement of a $35 million academic facility for athletes in February. But new programs can be funded the same way that project is – donations.

And while it may be incredibly difficult to add a new men’s sport that already has a corresponding women’s sport – such as swimming and gymnastics – adding a men’s and women’s sport at the same time would be in accordance with Title IX.

UCLA women’s club lacrosse is at nationals in Virginia Beach, Virginia, this week, so I think a good place to start would be by adding men’s and women’s lacrosse. There’s also men’s and women’s sailing, which Stanford already has as well.

One women’s-only sport to add would be field hockey, which could open the door for men’s gymnastics or men’s swimming to make a comeback.

Is all of this feasible? Not really.

But is it possible? Barely.

I know it’s not likely, and I’m sure getting back to the top of the national championship race isn’t a top priority for the university as a whole. But as long as Stanford has significantly more teams than UCLA, the only thing Bruin fans can do is cross their fingers and hope their current squads pick up the pace.

Pac-12 title, NCAA bid on the line for UCLA softball as conference play wraps up

The fight for the Pac-12 will come down to the wire.

With just one weekend left in the regular season, No. 3 UCLA softball (45-3, 19-2 Pac-12) is right in the thick of the battle to determine which team will claim the conference title.

Winning the conference title gives the team an automatic spot in postseason play. Since the Pac-12 does not hold a tournament for the title, the champion is determined by the team with the best record in conference play in the regular season. Whoever falls short has to wait and see if it can get an at-large bid for the NCAA tournament, of which there are a limited number.

Three teams are currently still in contention – UCLA, No. 6 Arizona (40-11, 17-4), and No. 2 Washington (42-7, 17-4). These three top-10 teams all still have a shot at the Pac-12 title, something coach Kelly Inouye-Perez attributes to each team’s success on both sides of the ball.

“It’s the ability to pitch; Washington has pitching, Arizona has pitching,” Inouye-Perez said. “Everybody across the country has good offense … but your ability to have some strength in the circle is what does it for the teams that are most successful, because even the teams that are very offensive will come up with losses.”

Going into last weekend, the Bruins and Wildcats were tied for first place in the standings with one conference loss apiece, both of which came at the hands of unranked opponents.

But the weekend shook up the race.

UCLA fell in its first game against unranked Stanford, though it still managed to salvage the series by winning the next two. Arizona was then swept by Washington at home, catapulting the Huskies into a tie for second place with the Wildcats.

“I definitely think that it’s pretty amazing to see how many upsets there have been in this particular conference,” said junior center fielder Bubba Nickles. “We know going into every conference game that it’ll be a challenge, they’re always after us or we’re always after each other, so I definitely think that’s what definitely makes us a good conference.”

The sweep against a ranked team led to Washington leapfrogging over UCLA into No. 2 in the national rankings, despite the Bruins having swept the Huskies earlier this season in Seattle.

Nevertheless, UCLA now sits alone atop the Pac-12 standings with a 19-2 conference record – and Washington and Arizona are chasing them from two games behind.

“Nobody gets to own it all the time … it’s about how we capitalize in these moments” Inouye-Perez said. “That’s the hard part of our sport.”

This coming weekend will therefore determine the Pac-12 champion, as UCLA comes home to face Arizona and Washington plays Stanford. With the way the rankings stand right now, in order to clinch the conference title, UCLA needs to defeat Arizona twice.

“Obviously it’s going to be a crazy series, just because it’s Arizona in general,” said sophomore shortstop Briana Perez. “We’re just going to go out and have fun and … do our thing and not focus on who we’re playing.”

Baseball continues midweek perfection with walk-off win over Long Beach State

Tuesday’s extra-inning walk-off win started with a reliever on the mound.

No. 1 UCLA baseball (38-8, 16-5 Pac-12) edged out Long Beach State (11-35, 5-10 Big West) 2-1 in a 12-inning walk-off win to take the season sweep over the Dirtbags. With the bases loaded, a passed ball allowed junior first baseman Michael Toglia to score from third, maintaining the Bruins’ unblemished midweek record.

“Coming off of a big weekend with Arizona State, it was good to get the win,” said coach John Savage. “It wasn’t pretty but it really doesn’t matter at the end of the day.”

Freshman right-hander Sean Mullen was slated to make the start for the Bruins Tuesday, but was scratched because of his appendicitis. In his place was junior right-hander Felix Rubi,who made his first career start going five innings, allowing one run and striking out four. In his previous appearances combined, Rubi had only pitched 5 1/3 innings across six games.

“The fact that he went five innings with 63 pitches was pretty impressive,” Savage said. “At the end of the day he gave us exactly what we wanted.”

The Bruins gave Rubi immediate run support as sophomore outfielder Garrett Mitchell doubled to right-center in the first and would advance to third on a wild pitch. This would set up an RBI fielder’s choice by junior second baseman Chase Strumpf, putting UCLA up by one.

The very next inning, the Dirtbags responded with a double of their own and advanced their runner on a wild pitch. A groundout to second would score the tying run for Long Beach State and the game would remain tied for the next 10 innings.

“I struggled in the beginning but I felt better as the game went on,” Rubi said. “I had to take a few breaths and really settle down and get used to the environment and to the feelings that I haven’t felt in a while.”

After allowing the one run, Rubi would retire the final 12 batters he faced. Dating back to his time at Glendale Community College, this was the first time the junior transfer had started a game since his freshman year of junior college.

“We were down to just a few guys,” Savage said. “We wanted to keep (sophomore right-hander) Mike (Townsend), (redshirt senior right-hander) Nate (Hadley), (junior right-hander) Kyle (Mora) and everybody in their roles. So we had (Rubi) and he stepped up and it was really a strong effort by him.”

Rubi would exit the game in the fifth, handing the ball over to the bullpen, which pitched seven shutout innings. After failing to record an out in his nine-pitch appearance against Arizona State on Sunday, Mora went a season-high three innings on Tuesday.

“There’s going to be blips along the way,” Savage said. “You play too many games for it to go right all the time. So I knew he’d bounce back, and that’s exactly what he did.”

The Bruins’ offense did not score a run for 10 consecutive innings and came up short in the 11th after Mitchell led off with a triple and was left stranded. However, in the 12th, Toglia reached base on an error and senior designated hitter Jake Pries’ double down the left field line put runners in scoring positions once again for UCLA. After an intentional walk to load the bases, catcher Antonio Torres let a 1-0 pitch slip past him, scoring Toglia to win the game.

“It wasn’t the best of our games this year, but at the end of the day all that matters is that we got the win,” said Mitchell. “But we do have a lot to learn from this game.”

UCLA will go on the road to play Washington State in a three-game series starting Friday at 5:05 p.m.

Ashe center offers free measles vaccines to prevent further outbreak

Students were vaccinated against measles at a vaccination fair Tuesday.

The event, which was held by the UCLA Arthur Ashe Student Health and Wellness Center, offered free measles vaccinations to students who previously were not vaccinated. Students without the University of California Student Health Insurance Plan were also able to to get the vaccinations at no cost.

The measles vaccination fair was held about two weeks after a UCLA student contracted measles as a part of a nationwide outbreak which, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is the largest outbreak since measles was eradicated nationally in 2000.

According to the CDC, there have been seven individual cases of measles in Los Angeles County and 764 cases nationwide in 2019.

UCLA, California State University, Los Angeles and UC Irvine are among the college campuses identified as sites for potential measles exposure. UCLA recently quarantined 127 students and faculty who could not prove they were vaccinated against measles. All students and faculty were released from quarantine May 2.

John Bollard, the chief of operations at the Ashe Center, said the event aims to help develop herd immunity at UCLA. Herd immunity occurs when the majority of people in a population are immune to a disease, preventing the disease from spreading to those who aren’t immune.

“Obviously we want a campus that’s immune,” he said. “When you have 43,000 students, 28,000 staff, the more you have vaccinated, if you drop (infected) people in on rare occasions, it doesn’t spread.”

Bollard said the Ashe Center has been working to increase awareness regarding vaccinations for students and staff. Earlier this fall, the Ashe Center held a large vaccination fair to help students verify their immunization records and receive any missing required vaccines.

Since 2016, UCLA has required all incoming students to present immunization records. Bollard said this was the first year that students had their registration placed on hold if they did not submit their immunization records.

Bollard added that it is difficult for international students to get vaccinated because many countries don’t offer measles immunizations.

Several students said they think these events will help encourage students to get vaccinated.

Karsyn Garrison, a first-year biology student, said she thinks the event is a good way to encourage unvaccinated students who cannot afford or access vaccinations to get immunized against measles.

“(UCLA is) a public place, and there’s a lot of little kids, so I’m concerned about the little kids who come with their parents,” she said. “If there’s a way (unvaccinated students) can get it for free on campus, they’re more likely to get it.”

Michael Mooc, a first-year computer science and engineering student, said he thinks unvaccinated people should seek to get immunized to protect those who cannot receive vaccines due to medical conditions or allergies.

“This shouldn’t be happening in the age of modern medicine,” Mooc said. “There’s no need for this to ever pop up again.”

Bollard said he hopes events like the fair will prevent another measles incident at UCLA.

“I’m really proud to have been a part of the UCLA response to the measles case,” Bollard said. “The fact that we have this many students and that case didn’t go beyond one case, speaks well to the fact that we have a largely immunized population.”

UCLA team receives grant to research financial motivators to quit smoking

A UCLA-led team of researchers received $3.4 million to find ways of financially incentivizing people to quit smoking, a university press release announced Friday.

The National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Drug Abuse, which aims to promote research on drug use and its impact on public health, awarded researchers a five-year grant to study how financial incentives can help end smoking addiction.

The research will focus on promoting sustained abstinence from smoking and improving quality of life for smokers, according to the press release. The research will study low-income smokers at high risk for related health conditions in particular.

The research follows similar incentive programs used by health insurers, employers and governments to motivate changes in behavior.

Hospitalized smokers, who are at higher risk for premature death due to smoking-related health issues, will be enrolled in the research program at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in Sylmar, California, and Bellevue Hospital in New York City.

USAC candidate sanctions fall drastically from last year

This year’s undergraduate student government found candidates violated almost 90% fewer election regulations than last year.

The Undergraduate Students Association Council election board issued a total of seven sanctions, the lowest number of sanctions in a USAC election in recent years. The election board is charged with making sure all candidates follow the proper procedures during the election. Last year, the board issued 56 sanctions.

USAC election code section 2.10.4 states the election board must make sanctions accessible to the public. In past years, the election board has updated sanctions in real time. All of this year’s sanctions were released to the Daily Bruin in bulk May 7. As of this story’s publication, the election board has not released the sanctions on other public platforms.

The council changed election board personnel several times in the months leading up to the election. Election board chair Kyana Shajari said the delays left her in a difficult position, trying to make up a deficit left by ousted chair Richard White. The election saw some procedural issues, in part due to these extenuating circumstances.

The sanctions themselves were relatively straightforward.

The election board evaluated 19 petitions for sanctions, but chose not to issue sanctions in the majority of the cases. Of the successful petitions, six came from the same three petitioners.

Only three of this year’s 16 candidates received sanctions. Presidential candidate Millen Srivastava’s campaign accounted for more than half of the sanctions issued this year.

All of the sanctions dealt with issues with campaign materials, according to documents from the election board. Candidates posted material in off-limits locations or online without the appropriate tags and logos in violation of election code. None of the offenses were as extreme as voter coercion, which was a major source of controversy surrounding last year’s election.

The most common sanction was limiting campaign time. Sanctions ranged from two- to 30-hour campaigning bans.

One secondary sanction was imposed on Srivastava for violating her campaigning ban sanction. In this case, the election board mandated that she make a social media post about her other violations and explain how these violations can be avoided in the future.

The new council was sworn in Tuesday night.

Guest lecturer explores the interpretation of video games through a queer lens

Bonnie Ruberg sees parallels to their queer experiences in video games like “Octodad.”

Within the game, players fulfill the role of an octopus pretending to be a human father, which Ruberg said resonated with their own experience as a nonbinary person.

Ruberg, an assistant professor in the department of informatics at UC Irvine, discussed how a queer person’s experiences can affect their interpretation of video games during a lecture at the UCLA Game Lab on May 1. Finding queer content in a game is similar to analyzing books or films, they said, where the content is considered through various interpretive lenses. Such analysis can push people to consider messages that could be seen as nontraditional, even if the games are not considered as being explicitly queer, Ruberg said.

“It’s a way of reclaiming video games because games culture can be really exclusionary, really homophobic and transphobic,” Ruberg said. “It’s a way of … saying, ‘You know what, even though you’ve made all these queer people feel unwelcome, this medium (of video games) belongs to us too.'”

The concept of “queer play” helps Ruberg discover the queerness within a game. When a gamer plays a game in ways not intended by the designer, they can incorporate their own identity into the narrative, Ruberg said.

A game called “Realistic Kissing Simulator,” for instance, could theoretically be seen as something that resists gender and sexuality norms through the freedom in its design, as no genders are explicitly stated, they said. The two-player simulator is a lighthearted take on kissing and lacks a clear winner, which Ruberg said deemphasizes the idea that sex is something one should try to be “the best” at. The game evades heteronormative ideas about gender and relationships because any two people can play together, they said.

Ruberg co-founded the Queerness and Games Conference, which fosters conversations on how to apply LGBTQ gaming concepts to the broader queer community, they said.

“To look at the ways (video games) relate to queer experience, or queer desire, even when (the games) don’t seem to have any queer people in them, is kind of the specialty of my research,” Ruberg said. “I’m finding queerness in games in ways that are still really meaningful even if there aren’t any LGBT people represented in these games.”

Testing the limits through speedruns can also open up new symbolic perspectives, said Christina Curlee, a graduate student and game designer who attended Ruberg’s talk. Speedrunning is the process of people exploiting self-discovered glitches within a game, such as button combinations that make the game jump forward in time, to complete it as fast as possible. Playing the game against the designer’s intentions can parallel the idea of resisting common societal narratives that tend to exclude queer people, Curlee said. A player could also implement their own code into a game to make it personalized based on their own preferred appearance, Curlee said.

“When you play games wrong, you’re literally not playing … the rules that were set up for the system and going instead in what feels right to you for what you want to do,” Curlee said.

Curlee uses software engines originally created to make violent video games, but instead uses them to change aspects of the original coding. Glitch colors, like pinks and purples that flash on the screen when the game is “broken,” make the game more colorful than it would have been originally and can provide an outlet for self-expression, Curlee said.

When video games allow people to pick their own characters, the gamer is also given a space to express their identity inside a fictional game. Choosing a character’s gender and outfits, for example, gives the player control of their in-game appearance, Curlee said.

“You can explore identities and explore things about yourself in games that you can’t in the real world, but you also can’t in something like a movie,” Curlee said. “It’s input in a very one-to-one, individual experience between you and the game.”

The characters that players are forced to use can also represent the LGBTQ community in a roundabout way, said alumna Sofia Staab-Gulbenkian, who helps run the UCLA Game Lab. In “Super Mario Bros.,” the lead male character is in love with a princess. Staab-Gulbenkian said she had to play the straight cis male character and the game encouraged the idea of her having a relationship with the princess. Thinking of herself – rather than just Mario – as in a romantic relationship with the princess helped create a personalized queer storyline, she said.

“I’m not a man, so I’ve never played games from a male point of view. So to me, (video games) always had an element of pretending to be somebody that I’m not,” Staab-Gulbenkian said. “The idea that your identity is fluid while you’re playing a game is not something that’s unfamiliar to me.”

However, finding queer interpretations of video games is not a replacement for LGBTQ representation, Ruberg said. It’s important for large gaming companies to reflect their queer audiences’ experiences, they said. However, supporting people who are queer and make small experimental games also has a profound positive impact on the community because it gives them more recognition in the gaming world that often lacks queer representation, Ruberg said.

“At some point (queer video game interpretation) starts to have an effect where people feel like they legitimately belong more,” Ruberg said. “And if those people feel that way, then they can go out and make change in what we see in games themselves.”