The 2025-26 UCLA Women's Golf Information Guide is a copyright production of the UCLA Athletic Communications Of ce, J.D. Morgan Center, 325 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, Calif., 90095.
The publication was written and edited by assistant director of athletic communications Vinny Lavalsiti. Special thanks to Eric Hurd for his graphic design contributions. Cover photos, head shots and team photos are taken by Don Liebig.
Photography by: ASUCLA Campus Studio (Don Liebig), Ross Turteltaub, LPGA and Getty Images.
MEDIA INFORMATION
Location (Course)
9/3-5 Pan Paci c University Golf Super League Tournament Mishima, Japan (Grand Fields Country Club)
Rolling Hills Estates, Calif. (Rolling Hills Country Club)
Phoenix, Ariz. (Papago Golf Club)
Dallas, Texas (Trinity Forest Golf Club)
Glendale, Calif. (Oakmont Country Club)
TBD
Carlsbad, Calif. (Omni La Costa Resort & Spa)
Huntsville, Ala. Robert Trent Hones Golf Trail at Hampton Cove Stanford, Calif. Stanford Golf Course
Tallahassee, Fla. Seminole Legacy Club
Waco, Texas Ridgewood Country Club
Contact: Vinny Lavalsiti
Of ce Phone: (310) 206-7870
Mobile Phone: (209) 781-6810
E-mail: vlavalsiti@athletics.ucla.edu
Address: 325 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095
Note: All interviews must be arranged in advance by the Athletic Communications Of ce. Athletes have been instructed not to grant any interview not arranged by the Athletic Communications Of ce. Telephone numbers are private and will not be released. Please do not expect team members to be available if you have not made prior arrangements.
Meghan Royal stars in a post-round interview at the 2025 NCAA Championships held at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa.
ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
Name Ht. Yr. Exp. Hometown (High School / Previous School)
Maye Huang 5-3 So. 1V Katy, Texas (Texas Connections Academy)
Jenny Lee 5-8 So. TR Osan, South Korea (Collegiate Academy of Seoul / Baylor)
Angela Liu 5-7 So. 1V Irvine, Calif. (Pacific Academy)
Alicia Um Holmes Head Coach, 3rd season (20th overall)
Erynne Yoo Assistant Coach, 3rd season
Steve Holmes Volunteer Assistant
Pronunciation Guide
Maye Huang may h-wong
Angela Liu loo
Kacey Ly lee
Jennifer Seo say-oh
Alicia Um Holmes like “hum”
Erynne Yoo air-in
GaEun Athena Yoo CAW-un
UCLA ‘02
UCLA ‘15
UC Irvine ‘95
L-r: Jennifer Seo, Zoe Sprecher, Jenny Lee, Meghan Royal, Angela Liu, Kacey Ly, GaEun Athena Yoo and Maye Huang
BRUINS ON THE LPGA TOUR
Twenty-nine UCLA women’s golf alumnae have appeared on the LPGA Tour and seven Bruins have won a total of 13 LPGA Tour events. Currently, there are nine Bruins competing on the LPGA Tour: Lilia Vu, Patty Tavatanakit, Ryann O’Toole, Alison Lee, Brianna Do, Bronte Law, Sydnee Michaels, Mariel Galdiano and Louise Ridderström.
Janet Coles (1975-76) became the rst Bruin to notch a victory on Tour in 1978 when she won the Natural Light Lady Tara Classic at Brook eld West Golf & Country Club in Roswell, Georgia. In 2023, Lilia Vu (2015-18) became the rst Bruin since Coles to claim multiple Tour victories when she won the Honda PGA Thailand, the ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican and two major championships at The Chevron Championship and AIG Women’s Open in 2023. Vu is the third UCLA golfer to have won a major championship and rst to win multiple majors. She joined Melissa “Mo” Martin (2000-05) who was the rst Bruin to win a major at the 2014 Ricoh British Open at the Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England. Patty Tavatanakit (2017-19) won the 2021 ANA Inspiration Championship (now known as The Chevron Championship).
VICTORIES ON THE LPGA TOUR
Athlete Event
Janet Coles 1978 Lady Tara Classic
Janet Coles 1983 Lady Michelob
Lisa Kiggens 1994 Rochester International
Melissa Martin 2014 Ricoh Women’s British Open *
Bronte Law 2019 Pure Silk Championship
Ryann O’Toole 2021 Trust Golf Women’s Scottish Open
Patty Tavatanakit 2021 ANA Inspiration Championship
Lilia Vu 2023 Honda LPGA Thailand
Lilia Vu 2023 The Chevron Championship
Lilia Vu 2023 AIG Women’s Open
Lilia Vu 2023 The ANNIKA at Pelican
Patty Tavatanakit 2024 Honda LPGA Thailand
Lilia Vu 2024 Meijer LPGA Classic
* Major championship event
ALL-TIME LPGA BRUINS
Athlete Years at UCLA Rookie Year
Loretta Alderete 1980-81 1986
Eunice Choi 1993-97 1999
Kathy Choi-Rogers 1992-96 2005
Amie Cochran 2004-06 2008
Kay Cockerill 1982-86 1987
Janet Coles 1975-76 1977
Brianna Do 2008-12 2013
Mariel Galdiano 2016-20 2019
Tiffany Joh 2005-09 2011
Hannah Jun Medlock 2003-07 2008
Lisa Kiggens 1990-91 1992
Hana Kim 2002-04 2005
Stephanie Kono 2008-11 2012
Bronte Law 2013-16 2017
Alison Lee 2013-15 2015
Lee Lopez 2010-13 2016
Mo Martin 2000-05 2012
Charlotte Mayorkas 2001-05 2007
Sydnee Michaels 2006-10 2012
Ryann O’Toole 2005-09 2011
Jane Park 2005-06 2007
Jenny Park-Choi 1991-96 2000
Kristal Parker-Manzo 1983-87 1995
Louise Ridderström 2012-16 2019
Giulia Sergas 1999 2002
Patty Tavatanakit 2017-19 2020
Mariajo Uribe 2007-09 2010
Lilia Vu 2015-18 2019
Jean Zedlitz 1986-90 1993
BRUINS ON TOUR
THE RISE OF LILIA VU
UCLA women’s golf alumna Lilia Vu (2015-18) took the golf world by storm in 2023, winning four tournaments, including two major championships, which earned her status as No. 1 in the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings on Aug. 14, 2024. She is the rst Bruin to ascend to No. 1 in the professional ranks. Vu led all golfers on the LPGA Tour with four victories in 2023 coming at the Honda LPGA Thailand, The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican and two major championships at The Chevron Championship and AIG Women’s Open. The 25-year-old Vu also clinched the 2023 Rolex ANNIKA Major Award (RAMA), which recognizes the player who has the most outstanding record in all ve major championships during the LPGA Tour season. She is the second American to win the award since its inception in 2014, joining Michelle Wie West, who won the inaugural award.
Vu’s meteoric rise has been storybook. In her debut season on the LPGA Tour in 2019, Vu made just one cut in nine events. Vu regained full membership for the 2022 season through the Epson Tour’s Race for the Card in 2021 after winning three times and earning Player of the Year honors. After eight top 10s and no wins in 2022, Vu burst onto the scene with her rst career title in the second tournament of the 2023 season at the Honda LPGA Thailand. She is the third player since the inception of the LPGA in 1950 to enter a year with no career LPGA wins, then go on to win multiple majors that season (Se Ri Pak, 1998 and Meg Mallon, 1991).
Two months later, she won her rst major at The Chevron Championship at The Club at Carlton Woods in The Woodlands, Texas in April. In August, Vu claimed took home a purse of $7.3 million in her second major title at the AIG Women’s Open at Walton Heath Golf Club in England. Vu was the rst American since Juli Inkster in 1999 to win two major championships in a single season.
“Being the best in the world, that’s just crazy to me,” said Vu following her win in Surrey, England at Walton Heath. “Just thinking about the struggle I had this year and just to come out with that has been – it’s just incredible.”
In 2024, Vu added her fth win at the Meijer LPGA Classic which is the most by a UCLA women’s golf alumna. Vu has 19 top-10 nishes and 34 top-25s in her career to date as of Sept. 10, 2024.
At UCLA, Vu was the Pac-12 Conference Golfer of the Year, WGCA Player of the Year and a Honda Sport Award Finalist in 2018. Vu, a three-time WGCA First-Team All-American, ranks rst in UCLA history with eight victories and second with a 71.09 scoring average.
She posted two top-10 individual nishes at the NCAA Championships in 2016 and 2018. In her junior season in 2017, Vu became the fth Bruin in program history to medal at the Pac-12 Championships, helping UCLA to its sixth team title and rst in 11 years.
Bronte Law
Patty Tavatanakit
Alison Lee
Ryann O’Toole
BRUINS AT THE OLYMPICS
Four UCLA women’s golf alumnae have competed on the world’s biggest stage at the Summer Olympics: Emma Spitz (Austria), Patty Tavatanakit (Thailand), Mariajo Uribe (Colombia) and Lilia Vu (USA). All four golfers represented their countries and UCLA at the most recent Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Le Golf National.
Golf was rst contested in the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, but was not featured again for another 112 years at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A native of Giron, Colombia, Uribe has appeared in all three Olympic golf events since its return in 2016.
Uribe, who was competing in her nal event as a professional, registered the best nish by a Bruin at the Olympics with a T-10th mark (-4; 70-70-71-73) in Paris.
ALL-TIME OLYMPIC APPEARANCES
Athlete Country Olympics Finish
Mariajo Uribe Colombia Rio 2016 T-19th (-3)
Patty Tavatanakit Thailand Tokyo 2020 T-23rd (-5)
Mariajo Uribe Colombia Tokyo 2020 T-50th (-1)
Emma Spitz Austria Paris 2024 T-29th (+2)
Patty Tavatanakit Thailand Paris 2024 T-29th (+2)
Mariajo Uribe Colombia Paris 2024 T-10th (-4)
Lilia Vu USA Paris 2024 T-36th (+5)
UCLA, ACROSS ALL SPORTS AT THE OLYMPICS
UCLA owns one of the richest Olympic traditions of any University. Some of the all-time Olympic greats, such as Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Karch Kiraly, Lisa Fernandez and Florence Grif th Joyner, to name a few, competed as undergraduates at UCLA.
Overall, UCLA students and alumni have won 284 medals - 141 gold, 74 silver and 69 bronze. The rst Bruin medalist was Farid Simaika (Egypt), who won two diving medals in 1928 (platform silver and springboard bronze). Shirley Babashoff is UCLA’s most decorated Olympian, having won eight swimming medals in 1972 and 1976 (two gold, six silver). Swimmer Tom Jager has the most gold medals, with ve from 1984-1992.
A total of 436 current or former UCLA students have made a combined 661 Olympic teams since 1928.
Current, former and future UCLA students won a total of 14 medals at the most recent 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, capturing ve gold, three silver and six bronze medals. Of the 49 Bruins representing their respective countries at the Games, 12 athletes won medals, and an additional ve Bruins were coaches or staff on medal-winning teams.
BRUINS AT THE OLYMPICS
Mariajo Uribe (Colombia)
Patty Tavatanakit (Thailand)
Emma Spitz (Austria)
Lilia Vu (USA)
Among the world’s leading research universities, UCLA is best known for the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. UCLA is a truly international university that offers a world of opportunity. Consistently ranked among the world’s top-tier universities and powered by extensive resources, a renowned reputation and – most important – the will to make a real difference in the world, the result is clearly in the numbers.
UCLA has been the nation’s the most applied-to university. For Fall 2025, the university received more than 145,050 applications for the freshman class. Each year, UCLA admits students from over 90 countries and all 50 states. Nearly 96 percent of the school’s freshmen live in university housing, and approximately 50 percent of UCLA’s undergraduates receive some sort of nancial assistance.
The top six most popular undergraduate majors include business economics, biology, psychology, political science, economics and psychobiology. The university offers 140 majors and more than 90 minors. In addition, UCLA has nearly 150 graduate degree programs, including an extensive selection of management and health sciences options. There are 40 UCLA doctoral programs that rank among the top 10 in their elds nationwide. Many of its 11 professional schools and academic departments and programs are ranked among the best in the nation. UCLA is a university with the size and scope to allow for unimagined diversity, unmatched breadth and depth of scholarship, and limitless possibility for its 33,000 undergraduates and 13,600 graduate students.
FACULTY, STUDENTS & ALUMNI
Eight UCLA faculty have been awarded Nobel Prizes – the ve most recent are Andrea Ghez in physics (2020), J. Fraser Stoddard in chemistry and biochemistry (2016), Lloyd Shapley in economic sciences (2012), Louis Ignarro in medicine (1998) and biochemist Paul Boyer in chemistry (1997). Among faculty there have been 10 National Medals of Science recipients, and hundreds of Guggenheim Fellowships, Fulbright Awards and other academic distinctions. At UCLA, thousands of students extend their education beyond the classroom, working directly with faculty on research projects. Many UCLA undergraduates participate in major research studies, working one-on-one with world-renowned scholars as they discover and create new knowledge. UCLA’s alumni are bright stars on the world stage. They include leaders of industry and commerce – Oscar, Grammy, Tony, and Emmy winners; philanthropists and public servants; Olympians and professional athletes; educators, engineers, bankers, and astronauts. Founded in 1934, the UCLA Alumni Association serves 88,000 members, part of the larger network of more than 500,000 UCLA alumni around the globe, with a comprehensive array of services and programs.
WELCOME TO WESTWOOD
BOOKS & TECHNOLOGY
The UCLA Library is ranked among the top academic research libraries in North America with holdings of more than 12 million print and electronic volumes and has over 15 million virtual visitors via the website. From the birth of the Internet at UCLA in 1969, UCLA continues to be a leader in resources for learning. UCLA is nationally recognized for developing ground-breaking computer services for undergraduates and was the rst university to have a website for every undergraduate. The UCLA Library is one of the largest student employers on campus, while countless hours are spent providing free research help and writing assistance of students. The university provides an innovative, on-line tool called “myucla.edu,” which provides a Web page tailored to each student’s academic needs.
OUTREACH & COMMUNITY SERVICE
From its founding, UCLA has been an integral and contributing part of the greater Los Angeles community. Outreach programs and volunteerism are as much a part of UCLA as academics and research, with hundreds of UCLA-sponsored programs providing a wide range of opportunities. Many of UCLA’s undergraduates volunteer for these programs, including tutoring youths, adults and incarcerated youths; addressing health and educational needs of underserved communities; combating poverty and homelessness; aiding the elderly and disabled; and providing legal, social, medical and educational assistance to community residents. Through outreach and academic preparation programs, UCLA works with K-12 schools throughout Los Angeles to help greater numbers of students prepare to compete successfully for college. UCLA also partners with community colleges to increase the number of underrepresented students transferring to the university. Additionally, UCLA faculty, researchers and students provide leadership and public service in health care, law, economic development, social welfare, urban planning, public policy, arts and the environment. Most academic departments have major research projects, eld studies or student internships that directly affect people’s lives in Los Angeles, the state and the nation.
HEALTH CARE
UCLA Health has been a leader in patient care, medical research, education and community service for more than 60 years. The UCLA health system includes four hospitals on two campuses; more than 160 community clinics throughout Southern California; the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and the UCLA Faculty Practice Group.
UCLA Health’s four hospitals – Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center; UCLA Medical Center, Santa Monica; UCLA Mattel Children’s Hospital; and Stewart and Lynda Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital at UCLA – are consistently ranked among the best in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. In addition, UCLA’s wide-reaching system of primary- and specialty-care clinics offers patients convenient access to the best in health care and the latest in medical technology. Patients also bene t from UCLA Health’s standing as a comprehensive academic medical system, in which physicians and scientists work together to discover new and better ways to diagnose and treat diseases. At the forefront of these efforts is the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. The medical school offers a comprehensive array of research and clinical centers – with such specialized emphases as stem cell and regenerative medicine, AIDS, gene therapy, neurosciences, women’s health and geriatrics – that translate research ndings into the latest diagnostic and treatment techniques across the broad spectrum of medicine. UCLA Health’s mission extends beyond the walls of its hospitals and clinics. Located in one of the most diverse communities in the country, UCLA Health has a wide-range of community health programs designed to prevent and treat adverse health conditions, such as obesity, asthma, cardiovascular disease, and much more. To learn more, visit uclahealth.org.
ARTS
A diverse array of public arts programming makes UCLA the leading arts and cultural center of the West. More than 500,000 people annually attend arts events including theater, music, opera and dance performances, lectures, poetry readings, exhibitions, lm screenings, and media arts that are presented by UCLA’s two professional arts schools. To learn more, visit arts.ucla.edu and tft.ucla.edu.
WELCOME TO WESTWOOD
A CLOSER LOOK AT UCLA’S TITLES
UCLA’s collegiate sports championship history stands out as one of the most impressive of any university in the nation. UCLA has proudly totaled 124 NCAA team championships (heading into the 2025-26 school year), an accomplishment that speaks to the Bruins’ commitment to excellence. UCLA’s student-athletes have consistently performed at an elite level in their sports, studies and public service. This well-rounded approach has helped to create champions on the eld and in the community.
UCLA won a school-record ve NCAA team titles during the 1981-82 school year, with softball, men’s swimming & diving, men’s tennis, men’s volleyball and women’s outdoor track & eld. The Bruins’ athletic programs have captured four NCAA team championships in eight school years and have totaled three titles eight times.
The athletics department has seen 17 of its teams win the NCAA title after having posted an undefeated record. Those sports include men’s tennis ( ve times), men’s basketball (four), men’s volleyball (three), women’s water polo (three) and men’s water polo (two). Most recently, the UCLA women’s water polo team compiled a perfect record of 26-0 in the spring of 2024.
Men’s Water Polo, Women’s Gymnastics, Women’s Indoor Track & Field, Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Soccer, Women’s Gymnastics, Softball, Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Golf, Women’s Gymnastics, Softball, Women’s Outdoor Track & Field
Men’s Water Polo, Men’s Tennis, Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Water Polo
Women’s Water Polo
Men’s Golf, Women’s Tennis, Women’s Water Polo 2008-09
Women’s Water Polo
2009-10
Women’s Gymnastics, Softball 2010-11
2011-12
Women’s Golf
Women’s Volleyball
2012-13 Baseball
2013-14
Women’s Soccer, Women’s Tennis 2014-15
2015-16
2017-18
2018-19
2020-21
2022-23
Men’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo
Men’s Water Polo, Beach Volleyball, Women’s Gymnastics
Beach Volleyball, Softball
Men’s Water Polo
Women’s Soccer, Men’s Volleyball 2023-24
Men’s Volleyball, Women’s Water Polo 2024-25
Men’s Water Polo
Photo Insert: Angela Liu
UCLA’s COACHES
Career Highlights
ALICIA UM HOLMES
Head Coach 3rd Season (20th Overall)
UCLA ‘02
• Golfweek Women’s Coach of the Year (2023-2024)
• WGCA Assistant Coach of the Year (2013-2014)
• 2011 NCAA Champion Assistant Coach
Biography
Alicia Um Holmes enters her third season as head coach of the UCLA women’s golf program in 2025-26. Um Holmes was selected to lead the Bruins on May 25, 2023, and made an immediate impact in her rst season with a runner-up nish at the NCAA Championships earning her 202324 Golfweek Women’s Coach of the Year.
Um Holmes spent 17 years as an assistant and associate head coach for the Bruins under UCLA Athletic Hall of Famer Carrie Forsyth from 2006-23, helping guide UCLA to the 2011 NCAA Championship, ve NCAA Regionals titles and two Pac-12 Championships. Um Holmes has also been a member of three national runner-up squads (2007-08, 2008-09 and 2023-24).
Um Holmes has continued UCLA’s strong history of success with a pair of NCAA Championship appearances and ve team victories over her rst two seasons as head coach. Most recently in 2024-25, UCLA advanced to its 35th NCAA Championships after completing an unlikely postseason run. The Bruins exacted a seventh-place nish at their rst-ever Big Ten Championship to qualify for the NCAA Tournament with a .500 winning percentage (65-64-1). A solid rst two rounds at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional gave UCLA a healthy 10-stroke buffer above the cut line to propel them to nationals. The Bruins secured key nishes earlier in their spring schedule that were essential in keeping postseason hopes alive. UCLA clinched its rst win of the season at the Bruin Wave Invitational in February and, one month later, nished fourth at the highlycompetitive PING/ASU Invitational.
In her two seasons leading the program, Um Holmes has coached a pair WGCA All-America honorees with First Team selection Zoe Antoinette Campos and honorable mention recipient Caroline Canales. Campos was also named one of 10 nalists for college golf’s top honor, the ANNIKA Award, in 2023-24. Two Bruins – Campos and Francesca Fiorellini – have earned allconference recognition since Um Holmes took the reins.
Um Holmes completed a remarkable rst season in 2023-24, resulting in a runner-up nish at the NCAA Championships, four team stroke play wins and numerous individual accolades and records. Um Holmes was awarded the Golfweek Women’s Coach of the Year for the team’s success. She was also a nalist for WGCA National Coach of the Year.
UCLA was victorious in Um Holmes’ second tournament as head coach at the Windy City Collegiate Classic where the Bruins ousted nine top-25 teams with a score of -32, 832 to tie the lowest 54-hole mark in program history. UCLA had a stretch of three consecutive wins to begin the spring at The Match in the Desert, the Nanea Pac-12 Preview and The Show. The four wins were the most for the program since the 2017-18 season. UCLA also secured its second straight Battle for the Bell title over crosstown rival USC in the fall with a convincing 4-1 victory. The Bruins’ memorable postseason run began by making the eight-team cut line for match play at the NCAA Championships. UCLA toppled Texas A&M in the Quarter nals, 3-0-2, and Oregon in the Semi nals, 3-1-1, before falling to top-seeded Stanford in the Finals, 3-2. The result marked the fth runner-up nish in program history.
Six of Um Holmes’ eight golfers recorded multiple top-10 individual nishes in 2023-24. The Bruins’ top performer was Campos, a consensus First Team All-American and ANNIKA Award Finalist, who led the team in scoring average (70.7), wins (4), top 10s (9), top 20s (10), rounds under par (21) and counting round percentage (32/32) for a second straight season. Campos’ four medals were tied for the most in UCLA single-season history and her 21 rounds under par set a program single-season record. Canales was also awarded WGCA Honorable Mention All-America acclaim for the rst time in her career. Canales put on a dominant show in the match play portion of the NCAA Championships with a perfect 3-0-0 record. On the Pac-12 awards circuit, Campos was named to the First Team while three Bruins were recognized as Honorable Mention: Canales, Meghan Royal and Kate Villegas.
Over Um Holmes’ 19 years at UCLA, the Bruins have produced two ANNIKA Award winners, which is given annually to the top female Division I collegiate golfer, in Alison Lee (2014) and Bronte Law (2016), as well as two WGCA Player of the Year honorees in Law (2016) and Lilia Vu (2018). Eleven UCLA golfers have hauled in 22 WGCA First Team All-America awards with Um Holmes
on staff. No school won more Pac-10/12 Golfer of the Year awards than UCLA once Um Holmes joined the staff, with four Bruin golfers – Tiffany Joh, Lee, Law and Vu – taking home the honor ve times. UCLA’s four Pac-10/12 Newcomer of the Year awards since 2006 trailed only one school.
Several of Um Holmes and Forsyth’s golfers are ourishing in the professional ranks. Current LPGA stars who Um Holmes helped recruit to UCLA are Law, Lee, Vu, Brianna Do, Ryann O’Toole and Patty Tavatanakit. Tavatanakit became the rst Bruin to win a major championship event since Melissa “Mo” Martin in 2014 at the 2021 Chevron Championship. Vu had her breakout season in 2023, ascending to World No. 1 and earning Rolex Player of the Year after winning two major championships – the Chevron Championship and AIG Women’s Open – and two other events at the Honda LPGA Thailand and The ANNIKA driven by Gainbridge at Pelican. Vu owns ve total victories on the LPGA Tour and has accumulated up to $6.8 million in career earnings.
Five golfers from the Um Holmes and Forsyth era have represented their country at the Olympics. Most recently, four Bruins competed at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games: Emma Spitz (Austria), Patty Tavatanakit (Thailand), Mariajo Uribe (Colombia) and Lilia Vu (USA). Uribe, making her third Olympic appearance and competing in her nal event as a professional, notched the highest nish by a Bruin at the Olympics with a T-10th placement.
Years Prior to Becoming Head Coach
Alongside retired UCLA head coach Carrie Forsyth, Um Holmes helped guide the Bruins to the 2011 NCAA Championship, ve NCAA Regional titles and two Pac-12 Championships. Beginning her rst year as an assistant in 2006, Um Holmes and Forsyth went on a dominant run of ve consecutive seasons with top three nishes at both the conference championships and Regionals. They placed top three at nationals in four of those ve years. As an assistant and associate head, Um Holmes coached 32 All-Pac-12 First Team selections and was a part of 54 UCLA tournament victories.
Following the 2013-14 season, Um Holmes was voted the WGCA Assistant Coach of the Year. That year, the Bruins won the NCAA Regional in Stillwater, Oklahoma and placed third at nationals.
Um Holmes was a student-athlete at UCLA from 1997-02, playing three seasons under Forsyth and one year for UCLA Athletic Hall of Famer Jackie Steinmann before graduating with a degree in economics. Um earned All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention accolades when she tied for 12th place at the Pac-10 Championship her senior season in 2002. She averaged a career-best 75.7 scoring average in 32 rounds, with three top 20 nishes that year. In her UCLA career, Um made 37 starts, played 107 rounds and averaged 77.2.
Prior to her appointment at UCLA, Um worked in the hospitality and golf industries as well as for an information systems company. For the 2005 calendar year, she competed on the West Coast Ladies Golf Tour, quali ed to play on the Futures Tour and participated in the LPGA Qualifying School.
Um played three years at Newbury Park High School before spending her senior year at Westlake High and graduating in 1997. She won the 1996 SCGA Jr. Match Play Championship and played in the 1997 and ‘99 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships.
In June of 2008, Um married Steve Holmes. The couple resides in Simi Valley.
Alicia Um Holmes (left) and senior Natalie Vo at the 2024-25 NCAA Championships
UCLA’s COACHES
ERYNNE YOO
Assistant Coach 3rd Season
UCLA ‘15
Erynne Yoo enters her third season as an assistant coach with the UCLA women’s golf team in 2025-26. Yoo, a former Bruin All-American, rejoined the UCLA program in June 2023 to work alongside her former coach Alicia Um Holmes.
Yoo and Um Holmes have continued UCLA’s strong history of success with a pair of NCAA Championship appearances and ve team victories over their rst two seasons together as a coaching staff. Most recently in 2024-25, UCLA advanced to its 35th NCAA Championships after completing an unlikely postseason run. The Bruins exacted a seventh-place nish to qualify for the NCAA Tournament with a .500 winning percentage (65-64-1). A solid rst two rounds at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional gave the Bruins a healthy 10-stroke buffer above the cut line to propel them to nationals. The Bruins secured key nishes earlier in their spring schedule that were essential in keeping postseason hopes alive. UCLA clinched its only win of the season at the Bruin Wave Invitational in February and, one month later, nished fourth at the highly-competitive PING/ASU Invitational.
In her two seasons leading the program, Yoo has coached a pair WGCA All-America honorees with First Team selection Zoe Antoinette Campos and honorable mention recipient Caroline Canales. Campos was also named one of 10 nalists for college golf’s top honor, the ANNIKA Award, in 2023-24. Two Bruins – Campos and Francesca Fiorellini – have earned all-conference recognition with Yoo on staff.
Yoo and Um Holmes completed a remarkable rst season in 2023-24, resulting in a runner-up nish at the NCAA Championships, four team stroke play wins and numerous individual accolades and records.
UCLA was victorious in Yoo’s second tournament as assistant coach at the Windy City Collegiate Classic where the Bruins ousted nine top-25 teams with a score of -32, 832 to tie the lowest 54-hole mark in program history. UCLA had a stretch of three consecutive wins to begin the spring at The Match in the Desert, the Nanea Pac-12 Preview and The Show. The four wins were the most for the program since the 2017-18 season. UCLA also secured its second straight Battle for the Bell title over crosstown rival USC in the fall with a convincing 4-1 victory. The Bruins’ memorable postseason run began by making the eight-team cut line for match play at the NCAA Championships. UCLA toppled Texas A&M in the Quarter nals, 3-0-2, and Oregon in the Semi nals, 3-1-1, before falling to top-seeded Stanford in the Finals, 3-2. The result marked the fth runner-up nish in program history.
Six of Yoo’s eight golfers recorded multiple top-10 individual nishes in 2023-24. The Bruins’ top performer was Campos, a consensus First Team All-American and ANNIKA Award Finalist, who led the team in scoring average (70.7), wins (4), top 10s (9), top 20s (10), rounds under par (21) and counting round percentage (32/32) for a second straight season. Campos’ four medals were tied for the most in UCLA single-season history and her 21 rounds under par set a program single-season record. Canales was also awarded WGCA Honorable Mention All-America acclaim for the rst time in her career. Canales put on a dominant show in the match play portion of the NCAA Championships with a perfect 3-0-0 record. On the Pac-12 awards circuit, Campos was named to the First Team while three Bruins were recognized as Honorable Mention: Canales, Meghan Royal and Kate Villegas.
Yoo returned to Westwood after 1.5 seasons as the assistant at Princeton University. The Tigers posted three top 3 nishes in 2022-23 and recorded their best performance of the season at the Columbia Classic where they placed second out of 14 teams. One of Yoo’s golfers, Victoria Liu, quali ed for NCAA Regionals.
Yoo was coached by Um Holmes and UCLA Athletic Hall of Famer Carrie Forsyth during her collegiate playing career from 2011-15. As a Bruin, Yoo was a three-time WGCA All-American, earning rst-team recognition in 2012 and 2013, was an All-Pac-12 First Team honoree in 2013 and was both the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year and NGCA Freshman of the Year in 2012.
UCLA quali ed for the NCAA Championship all four years with Yoo in the program, nishing in the top 10 three times with a high nish of third during her junior year. Yoo helped UCLA to an outright NCAA Regional team title in 2014 and a share of the title with an individual top-20 nish as a true freshman in 2012. She nished her collegiate playing career with four medals with one in each season.
Yoo competed in 26 LPGA events during her professional career. At the 2018 Bank of Hope Founders Cup at the Wild re Golf Club in Phoenix, Ariz., Yoo tied for seventh, marking her top nish to date on the LPGA circuit. On the Symetra Tour, Yoo has competed in 73 events, turning in 10 top-10 nishes, including wins at the FireKeepers Casino Hotel Championship and the Donald Ross Centennial, both in 2017, and the 2016 IOA Championship.
In international competition, Yoo was a member of the U.S. team at the 2014 Curtis Cup, was the stroke-play medalist while playing for the U.S. team at the 2013 Copa de las Americas, was part of the U.S. team at the 2012 Women’s World Amateur Championship and was part of the U.S. team for the 2008 Junior Ryder Cup.
Prior to earning her degree in psychology at UCLA in 2015, the Silverdale, Wash., native and alumna of Central Kitsap High School was a two-time U.S. Women’s Open quali er in 2008 and 2011, was a ve-time AJGA All-American and was twice named the Paci c Northwest Golf Association and Washington State Golf Association’s Girls Player of the Year.
Erynne (Lee) Yoo (right) during her time as a UCLA student-athlete and Alicia Um Holmes (left)
Erynne Yoo (left) and senior Tiffany Le at the 2024-25 NCAA Championships
PLAYER PROFILES
2024-25
MAYE HUANG
5-3
Sophomore
Katy, Texas Texas Connections Academy
Huang enrolled at UCLA in Winter 2025 and competed in the spring season for the Bruins … competed in six events ( ve starts) and 16 rounds … recorded a 75.0 stroke average and two rounds under par … logged two top 20s … registered her best nish of the season as an individual competitor at the Bruin Wave Invitational where she tied for 11th at +7 (77-71-75) from Feb. 24-25 … tied for 18th at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional with a score of +4, 217 (70-74-73) from May 5-7 … notched her lowest 18-hole score of the season with a -1, 70 in round one of the NCAA Charlottesville Regional on May 5 … subbed into the third round of the Big Ten Championships and provided a +1, 73 counting score … lost her lone singles match to USC’s Catherine Park at the Battle for the Bell on March 17 … played three rounds at the NCAA Championships, signing off on scores of 74, 78 and 77 in the rst, second and fourth rounds, respectively … 10/13 counting scores.
2024-25 low round score: 70, round one at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional (May 5) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 217 (70-74-73), at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional (May 5-7) 2024-25 best nish: T-11th, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
Prior to UCLA Huang prepped at Texas Connections Academy (Houston, Texas) ... ranked 26th in the American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) rankings at the time she signed in November 2024 … recorded two top-5 nishes in AJGA tournaments in 2024 … won her rst AJGA title at the K.J. Choi Foundation Texas Junior Championship in March 2024 with scores of 69-73-73 … the next week, she nished runner-up at the AJGA Lake Charles Junior Championship, shooting 76-69-68 … competed at the 2024 U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship at El Caballero Country Club where she made the top 64 of stroke play to advance into match play … won the 2017 National Drive, Chip and Putt in the age 7-9 division.
Personal
Born Maye Sumi Huang in Houston, Texas … parents are Yanmei Li and Yufu Huang … has one brother, Treed … brother, Treed, is a men’s golfer at UC Davis … enjoys art … favorite course she has played is Bandon Dunes Golf Resort … business economics major.
MAYE HUANG’S CAREER STATISTICS
2024-25 (Baylor)
JENNY LEE
5-8
Sophomore
Osan, South Korea
Collegiate Academy of Seoul / Baylor
Lee played in six organized NCAA Division I tournaments and made four starts in her freshman season at Baylor … registered a 75.67 scoring average over 15 rounds with two rounds under par … top result of the season was a T-36th placement in a eld of 96 at the PDI Intercollegiate where she shot -2, 214 (70-73-71) from Feb. 2-4 … tied for 35th in a eld of 72 at the Bruin Wave Invitational hosted at Valencia Country Club with a score of +15, 233 (81-76-76) from Feb. 24-25 … made her collegiate debut on Sept. 16-17 at the Waco River Classic at Cottonwood Golf Club where she nished runner-up (+3; 78-69) against lower division schools (does not count towards career stats) … penciled into the lineup for the rst time in the White Sands Aggie Invitational where she tied for 33rd (+11; 77-77) in the two-day competition on Oct. 19-20 … 8/11 counting rounds.
2024-25 low round score: 70, round one at the PDI Intercollegiate (Feb. 2) 2024-25 low 54-hole tournament score: 214 (70-73-1) at the PDI Intercollegiate (Feb. 2-4) 2024-25 best nish: T-36th/96, at the PDI Intercollegiate (Feb. 2-4)
Prior to UCLA and Baylor
Lee prepped at the Collegiate Academy of Seoul in South Korea … one of the most accomplished amateurs from South Korea with 51 worldwide junior wins prior to signing at Baylor … as a 12-year-old in 2019, clinched the individual and team medals for South Korea in the Women’s Individual Championship at the Spirit International Amateur Golf Championship at Whispering Pines Golf Club as the youngest competitor in the 76-player eld … in March 2022, she made her debut at the prestigious Augusta National Women’s Amateur where she nished four strokes back of the cut line … in June 2022, became the second 15-year-old to qualify for the 2022 U.S. Women’s Open eld by shooting a 139 in her quali er at Dream Park Country Club in the Republic of Korea … won the 33rd Seoul Association President’s Golf Cup in 2022 … two-time competitor in the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley, one of junior golf’s most coveted events, twice in 2022 and 2023.
Personal
Born Jeonghyun (Jenny) Lee in Busan, South Korea … parents are Suyim Ji and Kihi Lee … favorite courses she has played are Augusta Nation Golf Club (Augusta, Ga.) and Sage Valley Golf Club (Graniteville, S.C.) … chose UCLA because “it provides excellent facilities, great coaches and a chance to compete at the highest level in collegiate golf” … sociology major.
JENNY LEE’S CAREER STATISTICS (2024-25 at Baylor)
* Results from the 2024 Waco River Classic are not includes as it was not an NCAA Division I Tournament
Career Highlights
ANGELA LIU
5-7
Sophomore
Irvine, Calif. Paci c Academy
• WGCA All-American Scholar (2024-2025)
Summer 2025
Liu competed in the 125th U.S. Women’s Amateur held at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort from Aug. 4-10 where she missed the cut for match play at +7 (75-76) … tied for rst at -3, 70 in her quali er at Victoria Club in Riverside, California.
2024-25
Liu competed in eight stroke play tournaments (seven starts) and 25 rounds in her debut season in Westwood … led UCLA with a 73.28 scoring average … UCLA’s top nisher in four tournaments, including NCAA Regionals and the NCAA Championships … led the squad with four top 20s and two top 10s … tied for the team lead with seven rounds under par … signed off on two rounds in the 60s … placed eighth at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional with a score of +1, 214 (68-70-76) from May 5-7 … matched her season-low 18-hole score in round one of NCAA Regionals with a -3, 68 … tied for 24th at the NCAA Championships in Carlsbad at +2, 290 (71-74-73-72) from May 16-21 … best nish of the season was a 3rd-place result at the Bruin Wave Invitational with a score of +2, 217 (68-73-77) from Feb. 24-25 … tied for 11th at the PING/ASU Invitational, shooting a season-best 54-hole score of -2, 214 (70-73-71) on March 28-30 … halved her only singles match versus USC’s Jasmine Koo at the Battle for the Bell on March 17 … 20/22 counting rounds.
2024-25 low round score: 68 (2x), last in round one at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional (May 5) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 214 (70-73-71), at the PING/ASU Invitational (March 28-30) 2024-25 best nish: 3rd, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
Prior to UCLA
Liu attended three high schools, nishing the nal year of her prep career at Paci c Academy (Irvine, Calif.) … spent her freshman year and part of her sophomore year at San Joaquin High School and spent her junior year at Santa Margarita Catholic … a two-time ROLEX Junior Honorable Mention All-American in 2021 and 2022 … starred on a Santa Margarita Catholic squad that had its best year in program history in 2022 … double swept the individual and team titles at the CIF State Championships and CIF Southern California Regional Championships … won the 2022 CIF state medal at San Gabriel Country Club by ve strokes, shooting 5-under 67 … quali ed for four straight U.S. Women’s Amateurs from 2019-22 … tied for 16th in the stroke play portion at the 122nd U.S. Women’s Amateur at Chambers Bay (-3; 68-65) … competed in the 7th U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball at Grand Reserve Golf Club in Puerto Rico in 2022 where she reached the quarter nal round with her partner Charissa Shang (Harvard) … tied for 21st in stroke play (E, 72-72) and won her rst round of match play in her rst U.S. Women’s Amateur appearance at Old Waverly Golf Club in 2019 at the age of 14 … also made appearances at the 120th and 121st U.S. Women’s Amateurs … has won ve AJGA events … became the youngest winner of the Toyota Tour Cup Championship, a Southern California PGA Junior Tour event, in 2017 at 12 years old.
Personal
Born Yilin Liu in Xiang Cheng, China … parents are Xinyong (Alan) Liu and Ying Wei … hobbies include reading and listening to podcasts … favorite course she has played ins Old Waverly Golf
ANGELA LIU’S CAREER STATISTICS
Prior to UCLA
5-6 Freshman
Temple City, Calif.
Temple City HS
Ly prepped at Temple City High School (Temple City, Calif.) … advanced to the Round of 32 at the 2025 U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club after tying for 45th in stroke play with a score of +4, 146 (72-74) … defeated Stanford commit Nikki Oh in the Round of 64 … advanced to the quarter nals of the 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four Ball Championship at Oak Hills Country Club with her partner Celina Yeo … reached the Round of 16 the following year at the 2025 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four Ball Championship at Oklahoma City Country Club … placed third at the 2023 CIF State Girls High School Championship at Poppy Hills Golf Club with a score of -1, 70 in her junior year … competed in the 2025 and 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships … missed the cut at the 125th U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort with a score of +7, 151 (78-73) … recorded three top-5 nishes at AJGA events in 2024 … clinched her rst AJGA win at the AJGA Junior at Copper Valley on April 21, 2024 with a birdie on a one-hole playoff to nish -3, 213 … nished runner-up, losing in a playoff, at the AJGA Junior at Carolina Trace on Aug. 17, 2022 … placed fourth at the 2024 Rolex Girls Junior Championship at -7, 207 … tied for eighth in a eld of 68 at the 2024 Southern California Girls’ Junior Amateur at Morongo Golf Club with a score of E, 216 (69-71-76) … tied for fth at the 2023 Joanne Winter Arizona Silver Belle Championship (-4, 212) and placed 10th the following year at the event … won the 2023 Pasadena Women’s City Championship with a score of -14, 206 (69-71-66).
Personal
Born Kacey Thai Ly in Monterey Park, Calif. … parents are Christine Thai and Kirk Ly … has one sister, Kameron … her aunt attended UCLA … hobbies include shing … favorite course she has played is Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Bandon, Ore. … chose UCLA “because of its amazing balance of academics and athletics and the supportive coaching staff” … physiological sciences major.
Career Highlights
MEGHAN ROYAL
5-8
Senior
Carlsbad, Calif. Carlsbad HS / Arkansas
• All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention (2023-2024)
• Pac-12 Women’s Golfer of the Week (Oct. 10, 2023)
• SEC Freshman of the Week (March 20, 2023)
• WGCA All-American Scholar (2023-2024)
2024-25
Royal competed in nine tournaments (eight starts) and 27 rounds in her junior season … registered a 74.74 scoring average with three rounds under par … recorded her best two rounds of the season in the nal 36 holes of the NCAA Championships with a 68 and 70 as a substitute … notched her best nish of the season in UCLA’s rst tournament at the Windy City Collegiate Classic with a T-22nd placement at +9, 225 (72-78-75) from Sept. 30-Oct. 1 … shot a -1, 71 in the nal round of the PING/ASU Invitational to nish T-32nd (+4, 220) … tied for 29th at the Big Ten Championships at +6, 222 (75-72-75) … shot -2, 214 in the nal three rounds of stroke play at the NCAA Championships as a substitute from May 17-19 … 18/27 counting rounds. 2024-25 low round score: 68, round three at the NCAA Championships (May 18) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 220 (72-77-71) at the PING/ASU Invitational (March 28-30) 2024-25 best nish: T-22nd, at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (Sept. 30-Oct. 1) 2023-24
Royal was named All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention after registering a 72.8 scoring average over 25 rounds and eight stroke play events in her debut season as a Bruins … … recorded two top 10s and three top 20s … shot under par in nine rounds … totaled six rounds in the 60s, good for second-best on the team … named to the Golfweek All-Match Play Team after going 2-1-0 at the NCAA Championships with 1 UP win over Texas A&M’s Bianca Fernandez Garcia Poggio in the Quarter nals and a 4&3 win over Oregon’s Ching-Tzu Chen in the Semi nals … burst onto the scene in Fall 2023 as UCLA’s top nisher in the rst two tournaments … led the team in the fall with four rounds in the 60s … recorded her rst-career top-20 nish at the Mason Rudolph Championship to open the season, tying for 20th at -3, 213 (77-69-67) … bested that performance the next tournament with a runner-up nish at Windy City Collegiate Classic with a score of -9, 207 to help UCLA to its rst team victory of the season (66-73-68) … Royal’s runnerup nish at the Windy City Collegiate Classic came in a eld featuring nine top-25 programs, earning her Pac-12 Women’s Golfer of the Week honors on Oct. 10 … her -6, 66 in round one of the Windy City Classic on Oct. 2 marked a new career low … led the team in the fall with a 70.9
scoring average … shot under par in ve of nine rounds in the fall, tying Zoe Antoinette Campos for the most on the team … three of the lowest single-round scores of her collegiate career came in the fall … tied for 21st at the Nanea Pac-12 Preview with a score of +4, 223 (75-7573) … recorded her best nish of Spring 2024 at the Pac-12 Championships on April 21-23, tying for ninth at -3, 213 (75-70-68) … tied for 32nd at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional on May 6-8 with a score of +9, 225 (78-70-77) … tied for 39th in the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championships with a score of +8, 296 (75-69-7-75) … nished the season 2-2-0 in match play competition … 19/25 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 66, round one at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (Oct. 2) 2023-24 low 54-hole tourney score: 207 (66-77-68) at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (Oct. 2-3) 2023-24 best nish: T-2nd, at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (Oct. 2-3)
Arkansas (2022-23)
Royal played in 18 rounds across seven tournaments in her freshman season at Arkansas prior to transferring to UCLA ... earned four starts ... posted the third-best scoring average on the team with 74.8 strokes ... totaled six rounds at or under par, including a season-low 69 in round two of the MountainView Collegiate (March 18) ... earned SEC Freshman of the Week honors after recording her best nish of the season at the MountainView Collegiate, tying for 22nd at -3 (7469-70) ... nished with 208 pars and 43 birdies ... played great golf at the Battle at the Beach before needing to withdraw, logging a 70 in the rst round and 74 in the second ... earned a spot in the lineup for the rst time at the Moon Golf Invitational, tying for 32nd after carding an evenpar, 216 (72-72-72) ... played in the rst two rounds of the SEC Women’s Golf Championship. 2022-23 low round score: 69, round two at the MountainView Collegiate (March 18) 2022-23 low 54-hole tourney score: 213 (74-69-70) at the MountainView Collegiate (March 17-19) 2022-23 best nish: T-22nd, at the MountainView Collegiate (March 17-19)
Prior to UCLA and Arkansas
Royal prepped at Carlsbad High School (Carlsbad, Calif.) under coaches Brook and Dan Brand ... won the team title and medaled at the 2021-22 CIF San Diego Section Championship, nishing nine strokes under par ... named New Coast League Player of the Year in 2019-20 … invited to the 2019 Mickey Wright Invitational at San Diego County Club which hosts the top 24 high school girl golfers in San Diego County … three-time CIF San Diego Section First Team member … nished second at the 2021 California Women’s Open where she nished +3 … collected two top 15 nishes at the 2019 and 2021 California State Women’s Amateur Championships, placing fth and 11th, respectively.
Personal
Born Meghan Grace Royal in Loveland, Colo. … parents are Darrell and Heather Royal … home course is Shadowridge Golf Club in Vista, Calif. … has one younger brother, Mason … athletic inspirations are Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods … majors in sociology.
MEGHAN ROYAL’S CAREER STATISTICS (2022-23 at Arkansas)
Year Starts Rounds
2024-25
JENNIFER SEO
5-10
Junior Chandler, Ariz. Hamilton HS
Seo competed in four tournaments (three starts) and 12 stroke play rounds in her sophomore season … recorded a 76.6 scoring average … best nish of the season was a T-31st placement at the Bruin Wave Invitational where she shot +14, 230 (75-74-81) from Feb. 24-25 … lowest 54-hole score in relation to par came at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge where she shot +11, 224 (74-76-74) to tie for 59th from Feb. 2-4 … lowest 18-hole score was a +1, 72 in her rst round of the year at the Stanford Intercollegiate on Oct. 18 … 6/9 counting scores … lost to USC’s Kylie Chong in her lone singles match at the Battle for the Bell on March 17. 2024-25 low round score: 72, round one at the Stanford intercollegiate (Oct. 18) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 224 (74-76-74) at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge (Feb. 2-4) 2024-25 best nish: T-31st, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
2023-24
Seo played in three tournaments – two stroke play and one match play – in her debut season in Westwood … opened her career with a 1 UP match play victory over USC’s Brianna Navarrosa to help UCLA to its second-straight Battle for the Bell title … played in two stroke play tournaments in Spring 2024 … won ve holes on the back nine to secure the victory … registered a t-22nd nish at The Match in the Desert on Jan. 22 (E, 72) … tied for 57th in her lone appearance in the starting lineup at the Silverado Showdown on April 8-10 with a score of +11, 227 (73-77-77) … 3/3 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 72, round one at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 22) 2023-24 low 54-hole tournament score: 227 (73-77-77) at the Silverado Showdown (April 8-10) 2023-24 best nish: T-22nd, at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 22)
Prior to UCLA
Seo prepped at Hamilton High School (Chandler, Ariz.) under coach Jackie Walker … was ranked No. 51 in her nal American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) rankings before arriving to UCLA … earned AJGA Rolex Junior All-American Honorable Mention plaudits in 2022 … named the 2021 Junior Golf Association of Arizona (JGAA) Player of the Year … winner of the 2022 Girls High School Golf National Invitational at Pinehurst, N.C. … reached the round of 16 at the 73rd U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship with a pair of match play victories … tied for third at the Buick Shanshan Feng AJGA Girls Invitational with scores of 67-69-75 … dominated her intrastate competition with back-to-back titles at the 2021 and 2022 Chandler City Junior Championships and wins at the 2021 Willie Low Invitational and 2022 Thunderbird Invitational, a PING Junior Masters tournament.
Personal
Born Jennifer Seo in South Korea … parents are Kurt Kusaba and Taeboon Kweon … has one younger sister, Laura … athletic inspirations are Lydia Ko and Nelly Korda … majors in sociology.
JENNIFER SEO’S
CAREER STATISTICS
Prior to UCLA
ZOE SPRECHER
5-8 Freshman
Sierra Madre, Calif. Arcadia HS
Sprecher prepped at Arcadia High School (Arcadia, Calif.) … helped Arcadia to a runner-up nish at the 2022 CIF State Girls High School Championship at San Gabriel Country Club her sophomore year … placed fourth in a eld of 68 at the 2024 Southern California Girls’ Junior Amateur at Morongo Golf Club with a score of -3, 213 (72-72-69) … placed runner-up at the 2024 AJGA UHY Junior Open presented by Beau Hossler with a score of -3, 212 (70-71-71) … quali ed for match play at the 2024 and 2025 California Women’s Amateur Championships before falling in the Round of 32 … tied for second at the 2023 Toyota Tours Cup at Industry Hills Golf Club with round scores of 70-72 to nish even par … tied for fourth at the 2023 AJGA at PGA West at -5, 211 (70-70-71) … nished runner-up at the 2023 Toyota Tours Cup Junior PGA Championship at Las Posas Country Club with round scores of 70-67 (-5) … played alongside past Bruin AllAmerican and current LPGA Tour star Alison Lee as a high school freshman during her 2021 U.S. Women’s Open qualifying round.
Personal
Born Zoe Nguyen Sprecher in Beijing, China … parents are Trang Nguyen and Chad Sprecher … hobbies include playing piano and getting boba with friends … favorite course she has played is TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, Calif. … chose UCLA because of its “facilities, team environment and great education” … economics major.
Prior to UCLA
GaEUN ATHENA
YOO
5-6
Freshman
Alpharetta, Ga.
Lambert HS
Yoo prepped at Lambert High School (Suwanee, Ga.) … won a pair of AJGA titles in 2024 … won her rst AJGA title in July at the Babygrande Atlanta Classic at Pinetree Country Club (Kennesaw, Ga.) in a eld of 27 with scores of 69-68-70 … won the AJGA Atlanta Classic one month later at Planterra Club (Peachtree City, Ga.) in a eld of 27 with scores of 70-65-74 after nishing runnerup at the same event the previous year … biggest win as a prep star came at the 2023 PGA Girls High School National Invitational at PGA Frisco, competing for Lambert High School … clinched her individual title on the par-5 455-yard 18th hole with a 60-foot chip shot for eagle to take the lead, which later ended up at No. 1 on SportsCenter’s Top 10 that evening … placed T-2nd at the 2023 Georgia Women’s Amateur at Horseshoe Bend Country Club with a score of -3, 213 (71-7270) … helped Lambert win Georgia High School Association (GHSA) State Championships all four seasons (7A division in 2022-24; 6A division in 2025) … won back-to-back individual GHSA titles as a sophomore in 2023 (-1, 71) and junior in 2024 (-4, 140) … placed runner up at the State Championship her senior season (-6, 138) … named the 2024 GHSA 7A Player of the Year as a junior … was awarded Lambert High School Female Athlete of the Year as a senior in 2025 … honored as the Girl Golfer of the Year by the Forsyth County News in 2024 and 2025 … competed at the 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club (Tulsa, Okla.) where she missed the cut at +10, 152 (77-75) … competed at the 2025 U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club (Johns Creek, Ga.) where she missed the cut at +8, 150 (77-73).
Personal
Born GaEun Athena Yoo in Seoul, South Korea … parents are WonHo Isaiah Yoo and HyunJung Kim … has one brother, Jaden … mother, father and uncle attended UCLA … favorite course she has played is The Congressional Country Club Blue Course in Bethesda, Md. … psychobiology major.
Photo Insert: UCLA posing with its team trophy at the Bruin Wave Invitational.
2024-25 INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
(Par)
Zoe Antoinette Campos
9-11
30-Oct. 1
28-30 East Lake Cup (72) 1
Total Rounds: 10
Total Strokes (Season to Par):
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 1; Top 20s: 2; Rounds Under Par: 3; Rounds in the 60s: 2; Counting Rounds:
(10/10); Counters
Match Play Results (1-1-0): East Lake Cup - lost to Catherine Park, 6&5 (USC); def. Kiara Romero, 2UP (Oregon).
Note: Zoe Antoinette Campos departed UCLA following the Fall 2024 season to pursue her professional career.
Caroline Canales
Intercollegiate
Sept. 30-Oct. 1
Oct. 7-8 Illini Women’s Invitational (72)
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 1; Top 20s: 2; Rounds Under Par: 4; Rounds in the 60s: 2; Counting Rounds: 92.3% (12/13); Counters Scoring
Match Play Results (1-1-0): East Lake Cup - def. Jasmine Koo, 1UP (USC), lost to Suvichaya Vinijchaitham, 4&2 (Oregon).
Note: Caroline Canales departed UCLA following the Therese Hession Regional Challenge to pursue her professional career.
Player Dates
Francesca Fiorellini Sept. 30-Oct. 1
7-8
(Par)
Women’s Invitational (72)
Wins: 1; Top 10s: 1; Top 20s: 2; Rounds Under Par: 6; Rounds in the 60s: 2; Counting
Match Play Results (3-0-0): East Lake Cup - def. Bailey Shoemaker, 2&1 (USC); def. Karen Tsuru, 1UP (Oregon) ... Battle for the Bell - def. Xin (Cindy) Kou, 3&2 (USC).
Player Dates
Maye Huang
(Par)
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 0; Top 20s: 2; Rounds Under Par: 2; Rounds in the 60s:
Match Play Results (0-1-0): Battle for the Bell - lost to Catherine Park, 4&2 (USC).
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 1; Top 20s: 2; Rounds Under Par: 6; Rounds in the 60s: 3; Counting Rounds: 92.0% (23/25); Counters Scoring Average: 73.04 (1680/23) Match Play Results (1-1-0): East Lake Cup - lost to Kylie Chong, 1UP (USC); def. Ting-Hsuan Huang, 3&2 (Oregon).
* played as individual
72 (E) counted round
69 (-3) under par
Angela Liu
March 3-5
March 28-30
2024-25 INDIVIDUAL RESULTS
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 2; Top 20s: 4; Rounds Under Par: 7; Rounds in the 60s: 2; Counting Rounds:
Match Play Results (0-0-1): Battle for the Bell - halved with Jasmine Koo (USC).
Player Dates
7-8
18-20
2-4
(20/22); Counters Scoring
(Par)
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 0; Top 20s: 0; Rounds Under Par: 0; Rounds in the 60s: 0; Counting
Match Play Results (0-1-0): Battle for the Bell - lost to Kylie Chong, 2&1 (USC).
Wins: 0; Top 10s: 1; Top 20s: 3; Rounds Under Par: 7; Rounds in the 60s: 1; Counting Rounds:
(26/32); Counters Scoring Average:
(1913/26) Match Play Results (1-2-0): East Lake Cup - lost to Xin (Cindy) Kou, 1UP (USC); def. Tong An, 4&2 (Oregon) ... Battle for the Bell - lost to Bailey Shoemaker, 3&2 (USC).
Feb. 24-25 Bruin Wave Invitational (Santa Clarita, Calif./Valencia Country Club)
March 28-30 PING/ASU Invitational (Phoenix, Ariz./Papago Golf Course)
April 18-20 Big Ten Championships (Havre de
May 16-21
(Carlsbad, Calif./Omni La Costa
Total Stroke Play Rounds: 35
1 There were only four teams at the East Lake Cup, therefore “Top 5” and “Top 10” !nishes at the event will not count towards Head Coach Alicia Um Holmes’ career totals.
Team Match Play Results
Dates Tournament (Location/Course)
Oct. 28-30 East Lake Cup (Atlanta, Ga./East Lake Golf Club)
March 17 Battle for the Bell (Palos Verdes, Calif./Palos Verdes Golf Club) 1
1 Battle for the Bell match play scoring system: Each match win is considered one point. In the event of a tie, the each team receives .5 point. Consists of !ve singles matches.
Top UCLA Finishers
Golfer Tournament (Par)
Caroline Canales ANNIKA Intercollegiate (72)
Francesca Fiorellini Windy City Collegiate Classic (72)
Zoe Antoinette Campos Illini Women’s Invitational at Medinah (72)
Tiffany Le Stanford Intercollegiate (71)
Natalie Vo East Lake Cup (72)
Francesca Fiorellini Bruin Wave Invitational (72)
F. Fiorellini/A. Liu Darius Rucker Intercollegiate (71)
Angela Liu PING/ASU Invitational (72)
Natalie Vo Big Ten Championships (72)
Angela Liu NCAA Charlottesville Regional (71)
Angela Liu NCAA Championships (72)
Career Highlights
ANTOINETTE CAMPOS
5-3
Senior
Valencia, Calif. California Connections Academy
• 2-time WGCA First Team All-American (2023-2024, 2022-2023)
• 2-time Golfweek First Team All-American (2023-2024, 2022-2023)
• 2-time All-Pac-12 First Team (2023-2024, 2022-2023)
• 2-time ANNIKA Award Top 10 Finalist (2023-2024 2022-2023)
• 5-time Pac-12 Women’s Golfer of the Week (last April 2, 2024)
ANWA & Major Championship Finishes
• 2024 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (+5, MC)
• 2021 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (+10, MC)
• 2019 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (-1, t-5th)
• 78th U.S. Women’s Open in 2023 (+13, MC)
• 2023 The Chevron Championship (+4, MC)
Career
Campos made 39 starts and played 105 rounds with a 72.5 scoring average over her four-year career at UCLA … !nished her career in the top 10 of several categories in UCLA’s record book: six wins (T-4th), 43 rounds under par (5th), 19 rounds in the 60s (6th), 72.52 scoring average (8th) and 19 top-10 !nishes (T-9th) … tied for the sixth-lowest 18-hole score in program history with two rounds of 65 at the 2024 NCAA Las Vegas Regional and 2023 Stanford Intercollegiate … tied for the sixth-lowest 54-hole score in program history with a 204 at the 2023 Anuenue Spring Break Classic … 93/102 counting rounds (91.2%) … went 10-2-1 in match play competition.
2024-25
Campos played in four fall tournaments (10 stroke play and two match play rounds) before departing the program to begin her professional golf career … averaged 72.9 strokes during her abbreviated senior season … recorded three rounds under par, including two rounds in the 60s … logged two top-20 !nishes, including a season-best T-7th placement at the Illini Women’s Invitational with a score of -8, 208 (69-66-73) on Oct. 7-8 … shot a season-low 66 in the second round of the Illini Women’s Invitational on Oct. 7 … placed T-16th in UCLA’s !rst tournament of the season at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate with a score of +1, 217 (74-72-71) on Sept. 9-111 … defeated Oregon’s Kiara Romero 2UP in a singles match at the East Lake Cup … 10/10 counting rounds … entered the season as a Preseason First Team All-American by both Golfweek and Golf Channel … also named to the ANNIKA Award Preseason/Fall Watch List for a second straight year … the top-ranked American and fourth-ranked golfer on the globe in the World Amateur Golf Rankings entering the college season.
2024-25 low round score: 66, second round at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 208 (69-66-73) at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) 2024-25 best nish: T-7th, at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) Summer 2024
Campos helped Team USA to an Arnold Palmer Cup win for a second straight year at Lahinch Golf Club in Ireland in July, defeating Team International by a score of 32.5-27.5 … went 1-2-1 with a 1UP foursome victory … competed at the 43rd Curtis Cup at Sunningdale Golf Club in England where Team USA !nished second to Team Great Britain & Ireland, 10.5-9.5 … went 1-2-1 in her matches with a 2&1 foursome victory with her partner Catherine Park (USC) on day two of the competition … made her !fth appearance at the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club in Oklahoma ... placed third in the stroke play portion with scores of 72-68 (-2) before being ousted in the Round of 64 by Bailey Shoemaker (USC), 1UP.
2023-24
For the second straight year, Campos was a consensus First Team All-American (WGCA & Golfweek), an ANNIKA Award Top 10 Finalist and an All-Pac-12 First Team selection … led UCLA with four wins, a 70.7 scoring average, nine top-10 !nishes, 21 rounds under par, 10 rounds in the 60s and was the only Bruin to have all rounds count towards the team score … !nished the season as the !fth-ranked amateur in the world and !rst in the United States, per the World Amateur Golf Rankings … ranked as the No. 9 collegian by Spikemark … won four medals during her junior season which is tied for the most in single-season UCLA history … her 21 rounds under par set a UCLA single-season record, passing the previous mark of 20 set by Lilia Vu, Bronte Law and Alison Lee … her nine top-10 !nishes are tied for third in UCLA’s single-season record book … her 70.7 scoring average ranks third-best in UCLA single-season history … was UCLA’s top !nisher in seven of 12 events … 21 of her 32 rounds played were under par … !nished under par in seven of her 11 stroke play tournament appearances … shot career-low single-round
scores of 65 on two occasions – the !rst in round one of the Stanford Intercollegiate on Oct. 2 and the second in round two of the NCAA Las Vegas Regional … placed outside the top 15 only once and !nished the season with eight consecutive top-10 placements … helped UCLA to its !rst of four team tournament wins at the Windy City Collegiate Classic on Oct. 2-3, tying for fourth with a score of -8, 208 (67-70-71) … won back-to-back medals for the second time in her career and helped UCLA to back-to-back team titles at the Nanea Pac-12 Preview on Feb. 19-21 and The Show on March 4-5 … at Nanea, shot a -8, 211 (71-70-70) … at The Show, shot a -7, 209 (68-70-71) … placed seventh in UCLA’s next event at the Silicon Valley Showcase on March 1112 with a score of +4, 217 (71-76-70) … bounced back to earn co-medalist honors in UCLA’s next event at the PING/ASU Invitational on March 28-30 with a score of -9, 207 (69-70-68) … traveled to Georgia just days later to compete in her third Augusta National Women’s Amateur … led UCLA at the Pac-12 Championships on April 21-23 with a t-7th !nish of -4, 212 (73-70-69) … became the seventh Bruin in program history (ninth total time) to medal at NCAA Regionals … earned co-medalist honors at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional on May 6-8 with a score of -6, 210 (72-65-73) … tied for 10th in the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championships with a score of E, 288 (74-69-74-71) … won her match play round in the NCAA Championship !nal versus Stanford’s Sadie Englemann, 4&3 … went 5-1-0 in match play competition on the season … defeated USC’s Catherine Park, 3&2, to help the Bruins repeat as Battle for the Bell champions on Oct. 12 … won all three of her matches as an individual competitor at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge … honored three times as the Pac-12 Women’s Golfer of the Week ... 32/32 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 65 (2x), last in round two at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional (May 7) 2023-24 low 54-hole tourney score: 207 (69-70-68) at the PING/ASU Invitational (March 28-30) 2023-24 best nish: 1st (4x), last at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional (May 6-8)
Summer 2023
Campos made her second major championship event appearance at the 78th U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble Beach (Calif.) ... quali!ed for the U.S. Women’s Open by !nishing second in her qualifying round in her hometown at Valencia Country Club (E; 71-73) … helped Team USA win the 2023 Arnold Palmer Cup, 32-28, at Laurel Valley Golf Club as one of just three golfers and the only Team USA woman to !nish unbeaten (2-0-2) ... reached the quarter!nals of the 57th California Women’s Amateur at La Cumbre Country Club after setting the course record with a bogey-free -6, 66 in the second round of stroke play.
2022-23
Campos was named a WGCA First Team All-American, Golfweek First Team All-American, an ANNIKA Award Top 10 Finalist and to the All-Pac-12 First Team in her sophomore season … her 71.42 scoring average ranks sixth all-time for a single season in UCLA history … ranked 20th in the NCAA in scoring average ... also led UCLA with eight top 10 !nishes, nine top 20 !nishes, 14 rounds under par and !ve rounds under 70 … won her !rst two collegiate medals in back-toback events at the Anuenue Spring Break Classic (-12; 66-67-71) and Silverado Showdown (-5; 67-73-71) … !nished the collegiate season as the No. 7-ranked women’s collegiate golfer per Golfweek and No. 6 per Golfstat ... UCLA’s top !nisher in nine tournaments … !nished outside the top 20 only once, coming in a t-21st result at the Vystar Credit Union Gator Invitational … notched six under-par tournament !nishes, including four straight to end the season … her 12-under score at the Anuenue Spring Break Classic is tied for the !fth lowest 54-hole score in relation to par in program history and was the !rst Bruin to shoot at least -12 since Patty Tavatanakit in 2018 … shot the lowest score of her career in the !rst round of the Anuenue Spring Break Classic with a 6-under 66 and followed that with the second lowest round in her career with a 5-under 67 … opened the season with three consecutive top 10 !nishes … tied for !fth at the Blessings Collegiate Invitational where she shot +4 (77-73-70) … placed sixth at the Nanea Pac12 Preview where she !nished -5 (69-71-74) … ended the season very strong with a collective -24 across and 70.0 stroke average over her last 12 rounds … tied for seventh at the Pac-12 Championships with at -3 (71-71-71) … !nished runner-up at the NCAA San Antonio Regional where she !nished -4 (70-72-70) … was a total -11 in !rst round play and -3 in third round play in 2022-2023 … won three match play rounds in the East Lake Cup and Battle for the Bell … competed in her !rst LPGA major event at the Chevron Championship in The Woodlands, Texas where she missed the cut at +4 (77-71) ... named the Pac-12 Women’s Golfer of the Week in back-to-back weeks on April 4 and 11) ... 28/28 counting rounds.
2022-23 low round score: 66, round one at the Anuenue Spring Break Classic (March 27) 2022-23 low 54-hole tourney score: 204 (66-67-71) at the Anuenue Spring Break Classic (March 27-29) 2022-23 best nish: 1st (2x), last at the Silverado Showdown (April 3-5)
Summer 2022
Campos advanced to the Round of 64 at the 122nd U.S. Women’s Amateur at Chambers Bay before exiting in a playoff … led all Bruins in the stroke play portion, tying for 21st at -1, 145 (71-74) … quali!ed for the U.S. Women’s Amateur with a -2, 69 at Las Posas Country Club.
DEPARTING STUDENT-ATHLETES
2021-22
Campos competed in 13 events and 35 rounds, posting a 74.9 average score … posted one top 10 !nish at the Molly Collegiate Invitational (T-8th; +5, 221) and two other top 20 !nishes at the Stanford Intercollegiate (T-15th; -1, 212) and The Match in the Desert (T-17th; +2, 146) … tied with Emma Spitz as UCLA’s top !nisher at the Stanford Intercollegiate … shot !ve underpar rounds, including two sub-70 rounds in the second (-3, 68) and third (-2, 69) rounds at the Stanford Intercollegiate … won her match play contest in the NCAA Quarter!nals versus Auburn (May 24) … shot a 1-under 71 as a sub in the fourth round of stroke play at the NCAA Championships (May 23) … 23/32 counting rounds. 2021-22 low round score: 68, round two at the Stanford Intercollegiate (Oct. 16) 2021-22 low 54-hole tourney score: 212 (75-68-69) at the Stanford Intercollegiate (Oct. 15-17) 2021-22 best nish: T-8th, at the Molly Collegiate Invitational (Sept. 27-28) Prior to UCLA
Attended West Ranch High School (Stevenson Ranch, Calif.) for two years before !nishing at California Connections Academy (San Juan Capistrano, Calif.) for two years … tied for !fth at the 2019 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (-1, 215) when she was just 16 years old ... also competed at 2021 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (+10, CUT) ... tied for !fth place at the Girls Junior PGA Championship in July 2021 in Kentucky (-5, 287) … had a top-nine !nish at the California Women’s Amateur Championship in La Habra Heights, Calif., in July 2021 … in October 2020, was named to the Rolex Junior All-America First-Team … had ranked sixth in the Rolex AJGA Ranking at that time and earned her fourth Rolex Junior All-America award … in AJGA events in 2020, had tied for second at the Under Armour/Alison Lee Championship … also tied for fourth at the Rolex Tournament of Champions … tied for sixth at the AJGA Girls Invitational at Stanford … outside of AJGA action during the 2020 calendar year, won the Major Champions Invitational and was fourth at the Joanne Winter Arizona Silver Belle Championship
• 2025 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (+3, T-30th) Career
Canales made 40 starts and played 111 rounds with a 73.1 scoring average over her four-year career at UCLA … recorded one win, 15 top 10s and 23 top 20s … !nished her career ranked 12th in UCLA’s career record book in both scoring average (73.12) and rounds under par (30) … tied for 11th in UCLA history with 11 rounds in the 60s … 101/111 career counting rounds (91.0%) … went 10-3-0 in match play competition.
2024-25
Canales played in !ve tournaments (13 stroke play and two match play rounds) before departing the program to begin her professional golf career … averaged 72.8 strokes during her abbreviated senior season … recorded one top-10 and two top-20 !nishes … logged four rounds under par, including two in the 60s … best !nish of the season was a T-6th placement at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate where she shot -4, 212 (67-74-71) from Sept. 9-11 to open the season … tied for 17th at the Illini Women’s Invitational with a score of -4, 212 (71-69-72) from Oct. 7-8 … tied for 21st at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge with a score of +4, 217 (72-72-73) from Feb. 2-4 … defeated USC’s Jasmine Koo 1UP in a singles match at the East Lake Cup … 12/13 counting rounds … went 1-1-0 in match play competition … entered her !nal year as a Golf Channel Preseason Third Team All-American ... ranked 92nd on the globe and the 34th American in the World Amateur Golf Rankings entering the college season (Sept. 5) 2024-25 low round score: 67, round one at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate (Sept. 9) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 212 (2x), last at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) 2024-25 best nish: T-6th, at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate (Sept. 9-11)
… tied for sixth at the SCGA Women’s Amateur … reached the Round of 16 in match play at the California Women’s Amateur … reached the Round of 32 at the 120th U.S. Women’s Amateur at Woodmont Country Club in 2020 after tying for 26th in the stroke play portion with scores of 72-75 (+3) … missed the cut at the 119th U.S. Women’s Amateur at Old Waverly Golf Club in 2019 with scores of 75-74 (+5) ... reached the Round of 16 at the 117th U.S. Women’s Amateur at San Diego Country Club in 2017 as a freshman in high school (14 years old) with 4&3 and 2&1 victories in the Rounds of 64 and 32, respectively ... while at West Ranch High School (as a freshman), won the 2017 CIF state individual girls golf title by four strokes (at Poppy Hills Golf Course in Pebble Beach, Calif.).
Personal
Full name is Zoe Antoinette Campos … born in West Hills, Calif. … parents are Yvonne and Noel Campos … has one older brother, Josh … has always wanted to attend UCLA because of the university’s strong track record of producing excellent athletes and providing a great education … lists her greatest athletic thrill as playing in the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur in 2019, placing in the top !ve in a !eld with some of the best amateurs in the world (at 16 years old) … admires Rory McIlroy and the late Kobe Bryant … sociology major.
ZOE ANTOINETTE CAMPOS’ CAREER STATISTICS
2023-24
Canales was named a WGCA Honorable Mention All-American and All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention after registering a 72.6 scoring average over 43 rounds and 11 stroke play tournaments in her junior season … ranked second on the team with a 72.6 scoring average, four top 10s and 12 rounds under par … !nished the season ranked as the 51st women’s collegian, according to Spikemark … named to the Golfweek All-Match Play Team after going a perfect 3-0-0 at the NCAA Championships … those match play victories included a 2&1 victory over Texas A&M’s Cayetana Fernandez Garcia-Poggio, a 7&5 victory over Oregon’s Karen Tsuru and 2 UP victory over Stanford’s Paula Martin Sampedro … both Garcia-Poggio and Sampedro were ranked in the top 20 of the World Amateur Golf Rankings by the time of their defeat … with her 7&5 victory against Tsuru in the NCAA Match Play Semi!nals, Canales became the !rst Bruin to win an NCAA Championship match six up or better … holed out from the fairway on the 18th to defeat Sampedro in the NCAA Championship Final Match … best !nish of the season was at the Silverado Showdown on April 8-0 where she was UCLA’s top golfer, placing third with a score of -3, 213 (71-74-68) … notched top-10 !nishes at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (t-8th, -7), the Nanea Pac-12 Preview (9th, -2), Silicon Valley Showcase (8th, +5) and Silverado Showdown (3rd, -3) … helped UCLA to team victories at the Windy City Collegiate Classic, Nanea Pac-12 Preview and The Show … posted three rounds under par, including back-to-back 69s, at the Windy City Collegiate Classic to help Alicia Um Holmes to her !rst win as head coach … shot a season-low -4, 68 in the third round of the Silverado Showdown to secure her third-place !nish … tied for 18th at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional on May 6-8 with a score of +4, 220 (72-74-74) … tied for 24th in the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championships on May 17-20 with a score of +5, 293 (69-72-76-76) … was 5-1-0 in match play competition for the season … secured two victories at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge, defeating Baylor’s Ashleen Kaur, 1 UP, and Florida’s Jackie Lucena, 2 UP … 30/34 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 68, round three at the Silverado Showdown (April 10)
2023-24 low 54-hole tourney score: 209 (71-69-69) at the Windy City Collegiate Classic (Oct. 2-3)
2023-24 best nish: 3rd, at the Silverado Showdown (April 8-10)
Summer 2023
Canales reached the Round of 32 of the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur as the No. 5 seed at Bel-Air Country Club (Aug. 7-13) ... trailed two down in the Round of 64 before winning four holes on the back nine to advance.
2022-23
Canales was named to the All-Pac-12 First Team after ranking second on the team with a 72.9 scoring average in 12 events and 31 rounds … also ranked second with six top 10 !nishes, nine top 20 !nishes, nine under par rounds and four rounds under 70 … claimed the !rst medal of her collegiate career and shot UCLA’s lowest round of the season when she tied for !rst at The Match in the Desert with a 7-under 65 … UCLA’s top golfer in two events … UCLA’s only golfer to compete in all 12 regular-season events … !nished the collegiate season as the No. 54-ranked women’s collegiate golfer per Golfweek and No. 47 per Golfstat … won all four match play rounds at the East Lake Cup and inaugural Battle for the Bell versus USC … posted three-under par tournament !nishes … !nished outside the top 20 only twice … opened the season tying for fourth at the USF Intercollegiate to where she shot -3 (69-72-69) … tied for fourth at the Nanea Pac-12 Preview where she shot -6 (70-73-70) … tied for fourth at The Beach Invitational where she !nished +10 (74-79-73) … tied for eighth at the Vystar Credit Union Gator Invitational where she !nished +1 (71-70) … placed seventh at the Silverado Showdown where she shot +3 (7574-70) … tied for 20th at the Pac-12 Championships where she was +2 (75-72-71) … tied for
DEPARTING STUDENT-ATHLETES
16th at the NCAA San Antonio Regional where she !nished +5 (71-75-75) … shot under par in third round play in 2022-23, averaging 71.6 strokes in third rounds … 30/31 counting rounds ... named a WGCA All-American Scholar and CSC Academic All-District. 2022-23 low round score: 65, round one at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 23) 2022-23 low 54-hole tourney score: 210 (69-72-69) at the USF Intercollegiate (Sept. 12-13) 2022-23 best nish: T-1st, at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 23) Summer 2022
Canales was a semi!nalist in the match play portion of the 56th California Women’s Amateur in San Luis Obispo, Calif. after tying for 6th (+2, 146; 71-75) in stroke play out of the !eld of 124. 2021-22
Canales competed in 11 events and 33 rounds, posting a 74.0 average score … tied for second on the team with four top 10 !nishes, including a T-6th placing at the NCAA Tallahassee Regional (+2, 218) … was UCLA’s top golfer in three events at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate (T-25th; +3, 219), The Match in the Desert (T-10th; -1, 143) and The Gold Rush (T-5th; +5, 221) … tied for eighth at the Chambers Bay Invitational (+6, 222) … notched two other top 20 !nishes at the Pac12 Championships (T-19th; +6, 222) and the Lamkin Invitational (T-16th; +8, 224) … recorded !ve under-par rounds, including a season-low 3-under 69 in her !rst round of the season at the Annika Intercollegiate (Sept. 13) … shot a 6-over 294 at the NCAA Championships (par 72; 7672-73-73) … !nished the season ranked in the top 100 by both GolfStat (65) and Golfweek (83) … 29/33 counting score rounds … lost her only singles match to Auburn’s Mychael O’Berry in the NCAA Championships Quarter!nals … named a WGCA All-American scholar. 2021-22 low round score: 69, round one at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate (Sept. 23) 2021-22 low 54-hole tourney score: 218 (70-73-75) at the NCAA Tallahassee Regional (May 9-11) 2021-22 best nish: T-5th, at The Gold Rush (Feb. 28-March 1)
Career Highlights
• All-Big Ten Second Team (2024-2025) ANWA Finishes
FRANCESCA
FIORELLINI
5-6 Freshman Rome, Italy Seraphicum
• 2024 Augusta National Women’s Amateur (+9, t-30th) 2024-25
Fiorellini was named to the All-Big Ten Second Team in her freshman season … competed in 10 tournaments (nine starts) and played 24 stroke play rounds … registered a 73.9 scoring average … UCLA’s top !nisher in two tournaments … secured her !rst career win at the Bruin Wave Invitational by 10 strokes with a score of -9, 207 (69-68-70) from Feb. 24-25 … recorded two top 20s … totaled six rounds under par and two in the 60s … was UCLA’s top !nisher in her !rst collegiate tournament at the Windy City Collegiate Classic, tying for 13th at +5, 221 (7272-77) from Sept. 30-Oct. 1 … !nished under par at the Illini Women’ Invitational, shooting -1, 215 (73-71-71) for a T-34th !nish … shot 78 and 77 in the !rst and third rounds of the NCAA Championships … went an undefeated 3-0-0 in match play competition … defeated USC’s Bailey Shoemaker, 2&1, and Oregon’s Karen Tsuru, 1UP, at the East Lake Cup from Oct. 28-30 … defeated USC’s Xin (Cindy) Kou, 3&2, at the Battle for the Bell on March 17 … 20/24 counting scores … entered her debut year as a Golfweek Preseason Second Team All-American and Golf Channel Preseason Third Team All-American ... was listed as one of 25 student-athletes across the country on the ANNIKA Award Preseason/Fall Watch List.
2024-25 low round score: 68, round two at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24) 2024-25 low 54-hole tournament score: 207, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25) 2024-25 best nish: 1st, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
Prior to UCLA
Fiorellini arrives to UCLA as the top-ranked Italian, !fth-ranked European and 19th-ranked amateur on the globe, according to the World Amateur Golf Rankings as of Sept. 5, 2024 … her amateur career prior to UCLA was headlined by three major team victories in 2023 at the Junior Ryder Cup, Junior Solheim Cup and Patsy Hankins Trophy … at the Junior Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, she came back from 2 DN with two holes to play, holing a putt from 25 feet to tie the !nal match in front of a raucous home crowd … also won a foursome match and fourball match to help Europe to its !rst victory over the United States in seven years … at the Junior Solheim Cup at La Zagaleta Golf Club in Benahavís, Spain, she won all three matches, including a 5&3 victory in her !nal singles match … two years earlier in 2021, brought home Team Europe’s !rst-ever Junior Solheim Cup on American soil at Sylvania Country
Prior to UCLA
Canales attended Calabasas High School (Calabasas, Calif.), competing on the varsity golf team … during her junior season (2018-19), won the CIF state girls’ golf championship with a oneunder 70 for a one-stroke victory over Sherilyn Villanueva of Troy High School … won the 2019 CIF state girls’ golf regional and the Marmonte League individual title that season … was honored as the L.A. Daily News Player of the Year in 2018 and 2019 … had a top-nine !nish in July 2021 at the California Women’s Amateur Championship (La Habra Heights, Calif.) … tied for fourth (-6, 210) at the SCGA Women’s Amateur Championship in August 2020 … reached the quarter!nals of match play at the California Women’s Amateur Championship in July 2020 (Santa Cruz, Calif.).
Personal
Full name is Caroline Canales … born in Tarzana, Calif. … parents are Robyn and Richard Canales … has one older sister, Olivia, and one younger sister, Julia … her father, Richard, attended UCLA … Olivia played golf at UC Irvine … she chose to attend UCLA because the university has a great balance of academics and athletics, allowing her to discover her full potential in both areas … admires professional athletes Rafael Nadal, Nelly Korda and Collin Morikawa … played classical piano growing up (for 12 years) … also enjoys playing tennis … earned her undergraduate degree in sociology.
CAROLINE CANALES’ CAREER STATISTICS
Club in Ohio, where she won two of her three matches, including a 4&3 victory in the !nal singles match … helped Team Italy !nished runner-up at the 2023 European Girls’ Team Championship at Hossegor Golf Club in France … secured individual victories at the French International Lady Juniors Amateur Championship in 2021, the 92nd Portuguese International Ladies Amateur Championship (-9; 70-69-68-72) and the ANNIKA Invitational Europe (-5; 69-71-74) in 2022 … a !ve-time champion in her home country the last two years … back-to-back winner of the Giuseppe Silva Trophy at the Italian National Ladies Amateur Match Play Championships in 2024 and 2023 … won the 2023 Italian International Ladies Amateur Championships (67-70-7771) … in 2022, Fiorellini captured the Isa Goldschmid Trophy at the Italian Ladies Stroke Play, winning by eight strokes (71-68-67-71), and the Silvio Marazza Trophy at the Italian U18 National Championship, winning by 10 strokes (68-74-70-66) ... prepped at Seraphicum, otherwise known as Serpahicum Scholastic Complex (CSS), a private school in Rome.
Personal
Born Francesca Fiorellini in Rome, Italy … parents are Federico Fiorellini and Luisa Mazzucca … hobbies include skiing and playing tennis … favorite course she’s played is Evian Resort Golf Club, located in the French Alps … chose UCLA because it it’s the best mix between sports and academics, and offers a great opportunity for growth both as a student and athlete … undeclared major.
FRANCESCA FIORELLINI’S CAREER STATISTICS
Career Highlights
• Big West Golfer of the Year (2022-2023)
TIFFANY LE
5-8
Senior
Covina, Calif.
Walnut HS / UC Riverside
• 2-time All-Big West honoree (2021-2022, 2022-2023)
• WGCA Honorable Mention All-American (2022-2023)
Career
Le made 34 starts and played 94 rounds over her four-year career at UC Riverside (2021-23) and UCLA (2023-25) … posted a 73.88 scoring average in her two seasons at UCLA (3029 strokes, 41 rounds) … helped UCLA reach the NCAA Championships in each of her two seasons as a Bruin … secured two medals, both coming in her sophomore year at UC Riverside … went 4-2-0 in match play competition … totaled 16 top 10s and 22 top 20s.
2024-25
Le competed in 10 stroke play tournaments (nine starts) and 28 stroke play rounds … registered a 73.39 scoring average … led UCLA with three rounds in the 60s … ranked second on the squad in scoring average and rounds played … recorded one top-10 and two top-20 !nishes … totaled six rounds under par … opened the season with solid showings at the ANNIKA Intercollegiate (22nd, +2) from Sept. 9-11 and Illini Women’s Invitational (13th, -6) from Oct. 7-8 … shot the best 54-hole score in her UCLA career with a -6, 210 (76-67-67) at the Illini Women’s Invitational … placed runner-up at the Bruin Wave Invitational as an individual competitor, shooting +1, 217 (73-74-70) from Feb. 24-25 … UCLA’s top !nisher at the Stanford Intercollegiate where she shot +3, 216 (73-68-75) from Oct. 18-20 … tied for 21st at the PING/ASU Invitational with a score of +1, 217 (73-74-70) from March 28-30 … tied for 29th at the Big Ten Championships (+6, 222) from April 18-20 … tied for 47th at the NCAA Championships in Carlsbad at +8, 296 (75-74-7572) from May 16-21 … went 1-1-0 in match play competition … defeated Oregon’s Ting-Hsuan Huang, 3&2, at the East Lake Cup on Oct. 30 … 23/25 counting rounds. 2024-25 low round score: 67, rounds two and three at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 210 (76-67-67) at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) 2024-25 best nish: 2nd, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
Summer 2024
Reached the semi!nals of the California Women’s Amateur Championship for a second straight year at The Peninsula Golf and Country Club in San Mateo before being ousted by teammate Natalie Vo, 4&2 ... recorded match play victories over Janae Leovao (2&1), Zoe Jiamanukoonkit (4&3) and Emily Song (1UP).
2023-24
Le recorded a 74.9 scoring average over 13 rounds and !ve stroke play tournaments in her !rst season in Westwood … placed in the top 10 once at The Match in the Desert on Jan. 22, tying for sixth at -3, 69 … placed in the top 20 in her !rst-ever tournament as a Bruin at the Stanford Intercollegiate on Oct. 20-22 with round scores of 68-72-73 (T-14th, E) … shot a season-low -3, 68 in the !rst round of the Stanford Intercollegiate … tied for 21st at The Show on March 4-5 with a score of +5, 221 (73-75-73) … went 3-1-0 in match play competition with a 3&1 win over USC’s Bailey Shoemaker to help UCLA to its second-straight Battle for the Bell title … also defeated Florida’s Paula Francisco, 3&1, and USC’s Christine Wang, 1 UP, at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge … 8/13 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 68, round one at the Stanford Intercollegiate (Oct. 20) 2023-24 low 54-hole tourney score: 213 (68-72-73) at the Stanford Intercollegiate (Oct. 20-22) 2023-24 best nish: T-6th, at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 22)
Summer 2023
Le !nished runner-up in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship with teammate Kate Villegas on May 17 at The Home Course in DuPont, Wash. ... !nished in a four-way tie at the 27th Southern California Women’s Championship in Ojai, Calif. on Aug. 10 (-4; 68-69-72) before falling in a one-hole playoff to teammate Kate Villegas ... reached the semi!nals of the 57th California Women’s Amateur Championship on July 28 after tying for seventh in stroke play (-4; 72-68).
UC Riverside (2021-23)
Le was the 2022-23 Big West Golfer of the Year and a two-time All-Big West selection in her two seasons at UC Riverside ... earned WGCA Honorable Mention All-American acclaim in 2022-23 ... became the !rst golfer in UC Riverside history to advance to the NCAA Championships in 2022-23 ... set a program record with a 71.70 scoring average and 19 rounds at or under par in 2022-23 ... ended the year as the highest-ranked golfer in program history at No. 18, per Golfstat ... won the !rst two medals of her collegiate career her sophomore season in 2022-23 at the Hobble Creek Fall Classic (+3, 216) and Fresno State Classic (-2, 214) ... carded a program-record 7-under 65 in round one of the NCAA Pullman Regional and two days later secured her spot in the NCAA Championships with a 30-yard pitch-in for eagle on the 18th to !nish 6-under 66 in the third round and in third place at the event ... tied for 14th at the NCAA Championships at -3 with rounds scores of 75-68-71-71 ... !nished top 10 in nine of UCR’s 11 events in 2022-23, including six top 3 !nishes ... set the program single-season record for birdies (119) and eagles (4) in 2022-23 ... as a freshman in 2021-22, Le shot a team-low 73.71 scoring average and recorded !ve top 10 !nishes, including a T-4th mark at the Big West Championships ... !nished the 2022-23 season ranked No. 18 (GolfStat).
2022-23 low round score: 65, round one at the NCAA Pullman Regional (May 8, 2023) 2022-23 low 54-hole tourney score: 202 (65-71-66) at the NCAA Pullman Regional (May 8-10, 2023) 2022-23 best nish: 1st (2x), last at the Fresno State Classic (March 27-28, 2023) 2021-22 low round score: 67, round one at the GCU Women’s Spring Invite (Feb. 28, 2022) 2021-22 low 54-hole tourney score: 215 (74-70-71) at the Aggie Invitational (Oct. 4-6, 2021) 2021-22 best nish: T-4th, at the Big West Championships (April 10-12, 2022)
Prior to UCLA and UC Riverside
Le prepped at Walnut High School (Walnut, Calif.) where she was a four-time CIF Team Champion and three-time Hacienda League MVP ... inducted into the Walnut High School Hall of Fame and named the Walnut High School Female Athlete of the Year in 2021.
Personal
Born Tiffany Alana Le in Baldwin Park, Calif. … parents are Victor and Lucille Le … has one sister, Nicole … chose to attend UCLA to pursue her golf career at a higher level and the program’s resources to help develop her game for the next level … athletic inspirations are LPGA golfers Nelly and Jessica Korda … graduated with a degree in sociology.
TIFFANY LE’S CAREER STATISTICS (2021-23 at UC Riverside)
Year Starts Rounds Wins Top 10 Top 20 Under Par Under 70
* Incomplete statistics at UC Riverside.
Career
NATALIE VO
5-3
Senior
San Jose, Calif. The Harker School / Colorado
Vo made 38 starts and played 120 rounds over her four-year career at Colorado (2021-23) and UCLA (2023-25) … registered a 75.08 career scoring average (9010 strokes) … totaled one top 10 and seven top 20s … !nished her career with 21 rounds under par, including !ve in the 60s … helped UCLA reach the NCAA Championships in each of her two seasons as a Bruin, including a runner-up !nish in 2023-24 … went 4-4-1 in match play competition.
2024-25
Vo competed in a team-high 12 stroke play tournaments (11 starts) and 35 rounds in her senior season … registered a 74.26 scoring average … was the only Bruin to compete in all 13 scheduled competitions (12 stroke play, one match play) and all 38 rounds (35 stroke play, three singles matches) … tied for the team lead with seven rounds under par … recorded her !rst career top-10 !nish at the Bruin Wave Invitational where she tied for 6th at +4, 220 (73-74-73) from Feb. 24-25 … totaled three top 20s … UCLA’s top !nisher in two events: East Lake Cup (T-5th, -1) and Big Ten Championships (T-15th, +2) … logged her lowest 54-hole score of the season with a -3, 213 (72-70-71) at the Illini Women’s Invitational from Oct. 7-8 … her other under-par tournament !nish came at the PING/ASU Invitational where she shot -1, 215 (71-6975) to tie for 12th from March 28-30 … tied for 15th at +2, 218 at the Big Ten Championships from April 18-20 … tied for 23rd at the NCAA Charlottesville Regional at +7, 220 (71-72-77) from May 5-7 … went 1-2-0 in match play competition … defeated Oregon’s Tong An, 4&2, at the East Lake Cup on Oct. 30 … 26/32 counting rounds. 2024-25 low round score: 69, round two at the PING/ASU Invitational (March 29) 2024-25 low 54-hole tourney score: 213 (72-70-71) at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 7-8) 2024-25 best nish: T-6th, at the Bruin Wave Invitational (Feb. 24-25)
Summer 2024
Vo won the 58th California Women’s Amateur Championship at The Peninsula Golf and Country Club in San Mateo on July 27, earning her an automatic exemption at U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills in Oklahoma in August... defeated Amelia Garibaldi (Fresno State) 2&1 in the championship match ... her approach shot on the par-4 17th put the ball within two feet of the hole and set up the championship-winning putt ... also defeated teammate Tiffany Le in the semi!nals, 4&2 ... Vo’s win marked the second straight year a Bruin won the California Women’s Amateur (Kate Villegas, 2023) ... made her second U.S. Women’s Amateur appearance and !rst since 2019, missing the cut after two rounds at Southern Hills in Oklahoma with scores of 79-75 (+12).
2023-24
Vo competed in eight spring tournaments for the Bruins in her inaugural season in Westwood, registering a 73.9 scoring average over 23 rounds … was in the starting lineup for six of those events … shot under par in four rounds, including two rounds in the 60s … posted two top-10 !nishes at The Match in the Desert (4th, -5) and Silicon Valley Showcase (T-3rd, +2) … was
UCLA’s top !nisher at the Silicon Valley Showcase on March 11-12 with round scores of 70-74-71 … tied for 16th at the Pac-12 Championships on April 21-23 with a score of -1, 215 (76-68-71) … went 2-1-0 in match play at the NCAA Championships with a 3&2 victory over Texas A&M’s Zoe Slaughter in the Quarter!nals and 2&1 victory over Oregon’s Minori Nagano in the Semi!nals … shot her lowest round of the season in her Bruin debut at The Match in the Desert with a -5, 67 on Jan. 22 … tied for 38th at the Nanea Pac-12 Preview with a score of +10, 229 (76-7479) … tied for 31st at The Show on March 4-5, competing as an individual (+8, 224) … placed T-43rd at the NCAA Las Vegas Regional on May 6-8 (+13, 229) … tied for 45th in the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championships from May 17-20 (+10, 298) … went 3-2-1 in match play competition on the season … defeated Baylor’s Silje Ohma, 2&1, and Florida’s Inès Archer, 1 UP, at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge … 12/17 counting rounds.
2023-24 low round score: 67, round one at The Match in the Desert (Jan. 22)
2023-24 low 54-hole tourney score: 215 (2x), last at the Pac-12 Championships (April 21-23) 2023-24 best nish: T-3rd, at the Silicon Valley Showcase (March 11-12)
Colorado (2021-23)
Vo competed for two seasons at Colorado prior to transferring to UCLA ... posted a 75.98 scoring average in 62 career rounds as a Buffalo ... as a sophomore in 2022-23, Vo was the only Colorado golfer to compete in all 30 rounds with 27 of those rounds counting towards the team score ... !nished as the top golfer in four of Colorado’s 10 events in 2022-23 ... in 2022-23, posted two top 20 !nishes at the Barbara Nicklaus Cup where she !nished T-14th at +26 (83-73-76) and the PING/ASU Invitational where she shot her best 54-hole score as a collegian with a 2-over 218 to tie for 15th ... shot a 76.28 scoring average in 32 rounds as a true freshman in 2021-22 ... best !nish of her freshman campaign came in her !rst collegiate tournament at the Branch Law Firm/ Dick McGuire Invite which resulted in a T-23rd spot (73-78-72) ... in Summer 2022, Vo earned co-medalist honors at the U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship at the Club at Olde Stone in Bowling Green, Ky. after sharing the 36-hole lead with Japan’s Saki Baba at -7. 2022-23 low round score: 71 (3x), last in round two at the Silverado Showdown (April 4, 2023) 2022-23 low 54-hole tourney score: 218 (71-73-74) at the PING/ASU Invitational (April 3-5, 2023) 2022-23 best nish: T-14th, at the Barbara Nicklaus Cup (Oct. 3-4, 2022) 2021-22 low round score: 69 (2x), last in round one at the ICON Invitational (Feb. 21, 2022) 2021-22 low 54-hole tourney score: 219 (73-72-74) at the Illini Women’s Invitational (Oct. 11-12, 2021) 2021-22 best nish: T-23rd, at the Branch Law Firm Dick McGuire Invitational (Sept. 13-14, 2021)
Prior to UCLA and Colorado
Vo prepped at The Harker School in San Jose, Calif. under coach le-Chen Cheng ... named a three-time West Bay Athletic League First Team honoree ... helped The Harker School to the 2021 Central Coast Section title while winning the tournament individual medal … was the stroke play co-medalist at the 73rd Girls’ Junior Championship at The Club at Olde Stone with Japan’s Saki Baba at -7, 139 (71-68) … was a medalist at her 2019 U.S. Women’s Amateur Quali!er at Sierra View Country Club.
Personal
Born Natalie Ngoc-My Vo in San Jose, Calif. … parents are My Ngoc Le and Gino Vo … has one sister, Katelyn … home course is Silver Creek Valley Country Club in San Jose … athletic inspirations are Rickie Fowler and Lydia Ko … graduated with a degree psychology.
NATALIE
Year
VO’S CAREER STATISTICS (2021-23 at Colorado)
Rounds
Photo Insert: Kay Cockerill
1991 NCAA CHAMPIONS
NCAA Champs!
By Michael Klein – Daily Bruin
May 28, 1991
Legendary football coach Woody Hayes would have loved this one.
A team stepped onto Ohio State University’s Scarlet Golf Course and absolutely refused to lose. That team was the No.3-ranked UCLA women’s golf team, which captured its !rst ever national championship with a gutsy come-from-behind victory over top-ranked San Jose State.
For the !rst time in NCAA history, the national title was decided in a playoff. The Bruins wasted little time, winning the !rst playoff hole on a birdie by senior LaRee Sugg.
“This is my greatest moment at UCLA,” Sugg said.
Sugg’s incredible !nish overshadowed the performance of Christy Erb. She came into the tournament as the lowest-ranked Bruin, but she !nished in second place for the individual title behind Arizona’s Annika Sorenstam.
The NCAA Championships were supposed to b a three-team race between the Bruins, Spartans and Arizona Wildcats. Not coincidentally, they !nished one, two, three.
The three powers were left scratching their heads after Wednesday’s !rst round, however, as unheralded South Florida shot a 298 and held a two-stroke lead over the Spartans and threestroke lead over the Bruins.
“We played a good !rst round. South Florida played very well early, but we were con!dent that we could overtake them,” said head coach Jackie Steinmann.
Midnight came in the next round for the would-be Cinderella, as the Bruins scorched the course with an even-par 288, the best round of golf in UCLA history (the previous record was 290). The Bruins’ shots did not fall as frequently in the third round, though, as they faltered with a 307.
“I didn’t think we could have a repeat of the second round, so I was satis!ed with the score.
We got a little tired on the back nine, but we still had a two-shot lead over (San Jose State),” Steinmann said.
The fourth round Saturday was perhaps the most exciting !nal round in NCAA history. The Bruins still had their two-stroke lead after nine holes, and then the fun began.
On the 13th hole, Sugg placed her ball very close to the front of the tee marker, trying to !nd a at spot on the viciously torn-up tee. San Jose State’s Pat Hurst, the top-ranked player in the nation, apparently had a ruler in her brain and noticed that the ball was placed a little bit too far in front of the tee marker.
Hurst, on the urging of Georgia coach Beans Kelly, then noti!ed the of!cials. The divot was measured (Sugg had already teed off) and the ball was estimated to be half an inch too far. Sugg was assessed a two-stroke penalty and had to replay the hole.
The penalty and a slight lapse by the Bruins dropped them !ve strokes back of the Spartans with just two holes remaining. Then the rally started.
Freshman Lisa Kiggens birdied the 17th hole and miraculously got out from under a tree to salvage par on the 18th. Sugg and senior Debby Koyama parred both holes. This would not have been good enough to win without help from San Jose State. They obliged with a string of bogies and a double bogie.
The Bruins and Spartans were tied at 1197 when Erb calmly sank a six-foot putt to save par and send the tournament into a playoff.
“At the time, I had no idea that the whole tournament was riding on my putt,” Erb said. The Bruins also got a big lift from the gallery, which immediately sided with the Bruins after the penalty.
“Having the crowd on our side was a tremendous help, and it got us even more pumped up,” Sugg said.
“In those last two holes, I did not believe what I was seeing. The team came through. They just did it,” Steinmann said.
All of the San Jose State players made par on the !rst playoff hole. Erb, Kiggens and sophomore Liz Bowman parred for the Bruins. That set the stage for Sugg, who drained a 25-foot birdie putt for the national title.
“I was completely determined to make up for the penalty,” Sugg said. After the victory, more honors came at the awards banquet that night. Kiggens capped off the greatest freshman season in UCLA history by being named a First-Team All American. The Pac-10 Individual champion became the !rst freshman in UCLA history to garner such an honor.
Sugg and Koyama !nished off their UCLA careers by being named to the Second Team. Coach Steinmann was named the Far West Regional Coach of the Year.
“This is the best team I have ever had in my 14 years at UCLA. Their goal at the beginning of the year was to win the Pac-10 and nationals. They worked incredibly hard the whole year to achieve that goal,” Steinmann said.
Results
Columbus, Ohio (Ohio State University Golf Club) 1st (+45, 1,197)
Christy Erb (+3, 2nd) 291
LaRee Sugg (+12, t-13th) 300
Lisa Kiggens
(+13, t-16th) 301
Debbi Koyama (+20, t-33rd) 308
Elizabeth Bowman (+27, t-58th) 315
Christy Erb
2004 NCAA CHAMPIONS
Not even rain could stop the Bruins from winning the 2004 NCAA Championship at the Grand National Golf Course in Auburn, Ala., concluding the tournament at 4-under (1,148) to win by three shots over Oklahoma State. Three UCLA golfers, Susie Mathews (3rd, -8), Charlotte Mayorkas (4th, -4) and Gina Umeck (T-16), !nished inside the Top 20. The Bruins won their second NCAA title in women’s golf with a lot of heart and hard work. The experts were ready to hand top-ranked Duke the title. Th e Blue Devils had won 10 of the 11 tournaments in which they had participated, including a 14-shot victory over the Bruins in the Fall at the Stanford tournament. More than a few people said Duke was the greatest team ever assembled.
In the Spring the Bruins got hot. They won the spring season opener, the Regional Challenge, by 32 strokes. After !nishing third in their next event, they won every event that followed, including the Pac10 and NCAA Regional championships. At the NCAAs, they took the 36-hole lead and hung on while Duke faded and Oklahoma State ran out of holes.
A 24-hour rain delay on the !nal day helped. Entering the day with a seven-stroke lead, the Bruins watched their advantage shrink to nothing through the !rst nine holes. Rain came and hope followed.
“We were de!nitely struggling when they halted play (on Friday),” said Coach Carrie Forsyth. On Saturday, the rainbow appeared, and the Bruins erased the doubters by playing the !nal nine holes in !ve-under par. All-American Charlotte Mayorkas drained three birdies on the inward nine, including a 30-footer on the 71st hole, Susie Mathews added two birdies of her own to post an even par 72 and !nish third individually at eight under par. Gina Umeck tied for 16th with a clutch 73 in the !nal round.
“It’s pretty awesome to win this thing,” Mathews said. “It was quite hot most of the day but we settled down and pulled through in the end. I’m carrying the trophy right now. We’ve all taken turns with it. ... On the last hole I looked at the leaderboard and saw that we were three shots ahead. When I made my putt there was all sorts of cheering. It was just fantastic!”
In the end, the Bruins had won by three shots over Oklahoma State and by 11 over Duke.
UCLA not only won the NCAA title, but it also claimed Pac-10 and NCAA Regional Championships. Mayorkas was the medalist at Pac-10s, leading a 1-2 !nish with Hannah Jun, who won the Regional title with a score of 7-under, as Mayorkas tied for third. All told, the Bruins won seven times as a team in 2003-2004, tying the school single-season record for victories, !nishing in the Top 5 12 times.
Mayorkas had a historic season, winning four times with 10 Top 10 !nishes, both of which are tied for the school’s single-season record. Mayorkas was the Pac-10 Golfer of the Year, a WGCA First Team All-American and one of two Bruins to be named a Honda Sport Award nominee along with Susie Mathews, who was also a First Team All-American. Jun, the Pac-10 Newcomer of the Year, was a Second Team All-American, while Krystal Shearer was Honorable Mention AllAmerican. Carrie Forsyth was named the WGCA National and Regional Coach of the Year, as well as Pac-10 COY.
Results
Auburn, Ala. (Grand National Golf Course)
1st (-4, 1,148)
Susie Mathews
Charlotte Mayorkas
Gina Umeck
Hannah Jun
Krystal Shearer
314-314-296-292
(-8, 3rd) 78-75-75-73
(-4, 4th) 74-69-71-70
(+3, T-16) 71-72-75-73
(+10, T-49) 76-73-72-77
(+10, T-49) 73-75-75-75
Susie Mathews
2011 NCAA CHAMPIONS
A scoring snafu, a note of encouragement and some clutch putting on the inward nine propelled the Bruins to their third NCAA women’s golf team championship at the Traditions Golf Course on the campus of Texas A&M University, May 21, 2011.
The Bruins brought home NCAA trophy No. 107 and the 36th for the school in women’s athletics, increasing a pair of nation-leading !gures.
UCLA led wire-to-wire in this championship, but in the middle of the !nal round found itself trailing by a couple of shots after beginning the day with a seven-shot lead.
“We had some struggles on the front nine,” said Head Coach Carrie Forsyth, alluding to a triple bogey by junior Stephanie Kono at the eighth hole. “But we started making some birdies and it just sort of turned the tide a little bit.”
Kono redeemed herself with four birdies on the back nine, and helped inspire one of her teammates who was having a tough tournament. A note she wrote to freshman Ani Gulugian motivated the rookie to lead the team with a !nal round even par 72 — a key score in the last round.
As a team, the Bruins played the !nal nine in two-under par to register a fourth round score of 292 (+4) for a 72-hole total of 1,173 (+21).
Defending champion and eventual runner-up Purdue faded, in part, because of a disquali!cation. Although the signed, incorrect scorecard made little difference mathematically, the Boilermakers never recovered.
Sophomore Tiffany Lua, who held the individual lead at one point during the !nal round, led the Bruins by tying for fourth at 287 (-1). Third year sophomore Lee Lopez tied for 26th, Kono tied for 32nd, senior Glory Yang tied for 43rd and Gulugian tied for 65th.
“Just thinking about all those extra workouts, all those extra practices, and all those things you were dreading to get through but you did as a team, you just look back and it it makes you think that it was all worth it,” said Lua.
Lua was also the top Bruin at the Pac-10 Championship, tying for !rst place before eventually losing medalist honors in a playoff. Stephanie Kono added a T-1 showing at the Notre Dame Regional, one of two UCLA golfers to !nish in the Top 10 (Ani Gulugian, T-8). In addition to Kono’s victory, Lua won at the Landfall Tradition, while Lee Lopez was !rst at the Bruin Wave Invitational. Kono, who recorded 15 under-par rounds on the year, was a First Team WGCA All-American. Lopez and Lua were both named Second Team WGCA All-American, Glory Yang was Honorable Mention WGCA All-American and Gulugian was Honorable Mention Golfweek All-American. All !ve All-Americans were also named to the All-Pac-10 teams (First Team - Kono, Lopez and Lua; Second Team - Gulugian and Yang). Head coach Carrie Forsyth earned Pac-10 Conference Coach of the Year honors.
Results
Bryan, Texas (Traditions Club)
1st (+21, 1,173)
Tiffany Lua
Lee Lopez
Stephanie Kono
Glory Yang
Ani Gulugian
289-295-294-295
(-1, T-4th) 71-71-70-75
(+9, T-26th) 73-78-72-74
(+10, T-32nd) 75-71-78-74
(+12, T-43rd) 70-75-79-76
(+17, T-65th) 78-81-74-72
Tiffany Lua
YEAR-BY-YEAR RESULTS
BEST 54-HOLE SCORE
To Par
-32
no records kept 1975-76 no records kept 1974-75 no records kept 1 - NCAA Championships Stroke Play; 2 - NCAA Championships Match Play Top Five UCLA Single-Season Team Records Wins 1. 7 (2017-18) (2011-12) (2008-09) (2003-04), 5. 6 (2010-11) (2004-05)
12. Zoe Antoinette Campos 2022-23 14 Erynne Lee 2014-15 14 Tiffany Lua 2011-12 14 Tiffany Joh 2006-07 14 Charlotte Mayorkas 2003-04 14 16. Lilia Vu 2016-17 13 Lilia Vu 2015-16 13 Lee
ROUNDS IN THE 60s
SCORING
TOP 10 FINISHES
TOP 20 FINISHES
Claire Legaspi
Kristal Parker
54-HOLE & 18-HOLE RECORDS
Lilia Vu
Photo Insert: Bronte Law
UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann Class of 2008
Kay Cockerill Class of 2011
Women’s Golf Coaches Association Hall of Fame
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann Coaches Class of 1989
Janet Coles Players Class of 1988
Kay Cockerill Players Class of 1996
Carrie Forsyth Coaches Class of 2011
Tiffany Joh Class of 2021
Carrie Forsyth Class of 2023
Charlotte Mayorkas Players Class of 2023
ANNIKA AWARD WINNERS
Created in 2014, the ANNIKA Award presented by Stifel is annually given to the top female Division I collegiate golfer; the winner voted on by players, coaches and members of the golf media.
Named for and presented by Annika Sorenstam, the award was created in partnership with the Haskins Commission to acknowledge the top female golfer at the end of the season, to match the Haskins Award presented by Stifel which acknowledges the top male Division I collegiate golfer.
Two Bruins – Alison Lee and Bronte Law – have taken home the award in its 12-year history.
Lee was the first-ever winner of the award in 2014 after establishing the single-season scoring record and leading the nation with a 71.0 scoring average. Lee rounded up three tournament wins and nine top 10 finishes to help the Bruins to a third overall finish at the NCAA Championships. Law won the award just two seasons later after breaking Lee’s previous single-season scoring record (70.61). Law finished 10 of her final 13 rounds of the season under par. She placed first in three events and was a medalist or runner-up in four straight events leading up to the NCAA Championships where she notched a top 10 finish.
Alison Lee (2014)
Alison Lee of UCLA is the winner of the very rst ANNIKA Award which 3M proudly presents to the nation’s top female collegiate golfer.
Lee, a rst-team All-American and Pac-12 Player of the Year as a freshman, adds the ANNIKA Award to her growing resume after sweeping a vote of Division I golfers, college coaches and members of the golf media.
The award is an initiative of the Fred Haskins Commission and ANNIKA Foundation and is managed with the help of Golfweek. Oversight is provided by the Haskins Commission, which for 44 years has given out the Haskins Award to the outstanding male collegiate player.
Lee’s record last season at UCLA was impeccable. She set a single-season scoring record for the Bruins, led the country with a 71.0 stroke average and was a cumulative 22-under-par.
She won the Betsy Rawls, the Stanford Invitational and the Pac-12 Championships and nished in the Top 10 in nine of the 11 events she started. She was honored as Freshman of the Year by the Pac-12 and the WGCA.
She came to UCLA from Valencia, Calif., after a sparkling junior career. She was a six-time AJGA All-American and a nine-time winner on the AJGA circuit. Lee helped the USA to three straight victories at the Junior Solheim Cup and was a member of two Junior Ryder Cup teams. When votes for the inaugural ANNIKA Award were counted, it was Annika who delivered the news to Lee. This was not the rst time they had met. The young Californian won the 2012 ANNIKA Invitational — a victory she calls a turning point in her young career.
“I still remember winning the tournament … I had always been in contention and on leaderboards and nishing top 10 in other events but could never win. The ANNIKA Invitational was really the turning point because in my opinion, in order to be a great successful golfer, you have to learn how to win and the ANNIKA Invitational was a big step for me,” Lee said. Annika is proud that Lee is the rst winner of an award that bears her name. “She is a great young player at UCLA, who I got to know when she won our AJGA tournament a few years ago. I’m very happy for her.”
Bronte Law (2016)
Bronte Law is the third winner of the ANNIKA Award presented by 3M, the second from UCLA. Law was named the PING WGCA Player of the Year, as well as a WGCA First Team All-American. The top-ranked collegiate golfer, according to Golfweek, led the Bruins with a 70.6 scoring average this season, posting eight Top 10s in nine events, including a co-medalist nish at the Bryan Regional. It was her third victory of the season (Stanford Intercollegiate and PING/ASU Invitational) and the sixth of her career to tie Kay Cockerill for the most in school history. In her last four events prior to the NCAA Championships, she nished T-1, second (Pac-12 Championships), rst (PING/ASU) and second (Bruin Wave Invitational). She had 20 rounds under par and 11 in the 60’s. Law, who was named All-Pac-12 First Team, nished ninth in stroke play at the NCAA Championships and never trailed in both of her match-play contests. She was the rst ANNIKA Award winner to receive an exemption to compete in the Evian Championship, the nal LPGA major of the year.
“For me it is such an honor to be associated with Annika,” said Law in an interview with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell. “All year it has really been my goal to win the ANNIKA Award. To see such good players win it in the previous two years, to be named the winner, it means so much. Not only because you are considered one of the best players in college golf, but the fact that it is voted for by your peers, the media, and all of the coaches.”
“I can’t explain how proud I am to be a Bruin,” Law continued. “It is something I never thought I would experience.”
“I’ve known Bronte since I was 17, and she is such a hard worker, a super intense competitor,” said 2014 ANNIKA Award winner and former UCLA teammate Alison Lee. “I am super proud and she deserves everything with winning this award.”
Alison Lee
Bronte Law
WOMEN’S GOLF COACHES ASSOCIATION HONORS
PING WGCA PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Lilia Vu 2017-2018
Bronte Law 2015-2016
WGCA FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR
Patty Tavatanakit 2017-2018
Alison Lee 2013-2014
Erynne Lee 2011-2012
WGCA ALL-AMERICANS
2023-24
Zoe Antoinette Campos 1st Team
Caroline Canales Honorable Mention
2022-23
Zoe Antoinette Campos 1st Team
2021-22
Emma Spitz 1st Team
2020-21
Emma Spitz 1st Team
2019-20
Emma Spitz 1st Team
Emilie Paltrinieri 3rd Team
2018-19
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano Honorable Mention
2017-18
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano 2nd Team
2016-17
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano Honorable Mention
2015-16
Bronte Law 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2014-15
Bronte Law 1st Team
Erynne Lee Honorable Mention
2013-14
Alison Lee 1st Team
Erynne Lee 2nd Team
Bronte Law Honorable Mention
Louise Ridderström Honorable Mention
2012-13
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
2011-12
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Lee Lopez 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Ani Gulugian Honorable Mention
2010-11
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Lee Lopez 2nd Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2009-10
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Sydnee Michaels 2nd Team
2008-09
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Mariajo Uribe 1st Team
Glory Yang 2nd Team
Tiffany Joh Honorable Mention
2007-08
Tiffany Joh
Mariajo Uribe 1st Team
Sydnee Michaels 2nd Team
Glory Yang 2nd Team
2006-07
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
Hannah Jun Honorable Mention
2005-06
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Jane Park 1st Team
Amie Cochran Honorable Mention
2004-05
Charlotte Mayorkas 1st Team
Amie Cochran 2nd Team
Susie Mathews 2nd Team
2003-04
Susie Mathews 1st Team
Charlotte Mayorkas 1st Team
Hannah Jun 2nd Team
Krystal Shearer Honorable Mention
2002-03
Charlotte Mayorkas
Laura Moffat Honorable Mention
Amanda Moltke-Leth
Amandine Vincent
Sophie Sandolo
Jenny Park
Kathy Choi
Jeong Min Park
Amandine Vincent
Jennifer Choi
Amandine Vincent
Erb
Kiggens
Koyama
Sugg
Valerie Pamard
Kristal Parker
Kay Cockerill
Kristal Parker
1984-85
Kay Cockerill
Kristal Parker
Notes: Thirty-one UCLA student-athletes have hauled in 55 total WGCA All-American selections, including 38 First-Team nods. Does not include honorable mention.
Tiffany Lua is the only UCLA student-athlete to be selected to a WGCA All-American Team four times while Tiffany Joh and
Eyrnne Lee have been recognized to three All-American teams and one honorable mention list.
Emma Spitz, Stephanie Kono, Charlotte Mayorkas and Lilia Vu are UCLA’s only three-time WGCA First-Team All-Americans. Zoe Antoinette Campos, Tiffany Joh, Lee, Bronte Law, Patty Tavatanakit and Mariajo Uribe are next with two First-Team AllAmerican recognitions each.
WGCA ALL-AMERICAN SCHOLARS
Francesca Fiorellini 2024-25
Angela Liu 2024-25
Meghan Royal 2023-24
Caroline Canales 2022-23, 2021-22
Yuki Yoshihara 2020-21, 2019-20
Ty Akabane 2019-20
Emilie Paltrinieri 2019-20
Louise Ridderström 2015-16, 2012-13
Susie Mathews 2005-06, 2004-05, 2003-04, 2002-03
Bridget Dwyer 2003-04, 2002-03
Gina Umeck 2003-04
Alexandra Gasser 1998-99, 1997-98
Valerie Pamard 1987-88
WGCA NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR
Carrie Forsyth 2003-04
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann 1995-96
WGCA REGIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR
Carrie Forsyth 2017-18, 2011-12, 2009-10, 2003-04
WGCA PALMER MERITORIOUS SERVICE AWARD
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann 1985-86
WGCA ASSISTANT COACH OF THE YEAR
Alicia Um Holmes 2013-14
Emma Spitz
GOLFWEEK PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Bronte Law
2015-16
Alison Lee 2013-14
GOLFWEEK ALL-AMERICANS
2023-24
Zoe Antoinette Campos 1st Team
2022-23
Zoe Antoinette Campos 1st Team
2021-22
Emma Spitz 1st Team
2020-21
Emma Spitz 1st Team
2019-20
Emma Spitz 1st Team
Emilie Paltrinieri Honorable Mention
2018-19
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano 3rd Team
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2017-18
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano 2nd Team
2016-17
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Mariel Galdiano 2nd Team
2015-16
Bronte Law 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2014-15
Bronte Law 1st Team
Erynne Lee 2nd Team
2013-14
Alison Lee 1st Team
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Louise Ridderström 3rd Team
Bronte Law Honorable Mention
2012-13
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
2011-12
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Lee Lopez 2nd Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Ani Gulugian Honorable Mention
2010-11
Stephanie Kono 2nd Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Lee Lopez 3rd Team
Ani Gulugian Honorable Mention
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2009-10
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Sydnee Michaels 2nd Team
2008-09
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Mariajo Uribe 2nd Team
Tiffany Joh 3rd Team
Glory Yang 3rd Team
Sydnee Michaels Honorable Mention
GOLFWEEK HONORS
2007-08
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Mariajo Uribe 1st Team
Glory Yang 2nd Team
Sydnee Michaels 3rd Team
2006-07
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
Hannah Jun Honorable Mention
2005-06
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Jane Park 1st Team
Amie Cochran 2nd Team
Hannah Jun 2nd Team
Susie Mathews 3rd Team
Notes: Nineteen UCLA student-athletes have hauled in 44 total GolfWeek All-American selections, including 21 First-Team nods. Does not include honorable mention.
Tiffany Joh, Erynne Lee and Tiffany Lua are the only UCLA student-athletes to be selected to a GolfWeek All-American Team four times in a career. Emma Spitz, Mariel Galdiano, Stephanie Kono and Lilia Vu have been recognized on three GolfWeek All-American Teams.
Emma Spitz, Erynne Lee and Lilia Vu are UCLA’s only three-time GolfWeek First-Team All-Americans. Zoe Antoinette Campos, Tiffany Joh, Stephanie Kono, Bronte Law and Patty Tavatanakit have been named to two GolfWeek All-American First Teams.
GOLFWEEK ALL-MATCH PLAY TEAM
2023-24
Caroline Canales Meghan Royal
GOLFWEEK WOMEN’S COACH OF THE YEAR
Alicia Um Homes 2023-24
Sydnee Michaels
Glory Yang
CONFERENCE GOLFERS OF THE YEAR
Lilia Vu
2017-18 (Pac-12)
Bronte Law 2015-16, 2014-15 (Pac-12)
Alison Lee 2013-14 (Pac-12)
Tiffany Joh 2007-08 (Pac-10)
Charlotte Mayorkas 2003-04 (Pac-10)
CONFERENCE FRESHMEN/NEWCOMERS OF THE YEAR
Patty Tavatanakit
2017-18 (Pac-12)
Lilia Vu 2015-16 (Pac-12)
Alison Lee 2013-14 (Pac-12)
Erynne Lee 2011-12 (Pac-12)
Tiffany Joh 2005-06 (Pac-10)
Hannah Jun 2003-04 (Pac-10)
Yvonne Choe 2001-02 (Pac-10)
ALL-BIG TEN CONFERENCE
2024-25
Francesca Fiorellini 2nd Team
ALL-PAC-10/12 CONFERENCE
2023-24
Zoe Antoinette Campos 1st Team
Caroline Canales Honorable Mention
Meghan Royal Honorable Mention
Kate Villegas Honorable Mention
2022-23 (no team designations)
Zoe Antoinette Campos
Caroline Canales
2021-22 (no team designations)
Emma Spitz
2020-21
Emma Spitz 1st Team
Annabel Wilson Honorable Mention
Yuki Yoshihara Honorable Mention
2018-19
Mariel Galdiano 1st Team
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
2017-18
Mariel Galdiano 1st Team
Patty Tavatanakit 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2016-17
Mariel Galdiano 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2015-16
Bronte Law 1st Team
Lilia Vu 1st Team
Louise Ridderström Honorable Mention
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2014-15
Bronte Law 1st Team
Erynne Lee 1st Team
2013-14
Alison Lee 1st Team
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Bronte Law 2nd Team
Ani Gulugian Honorable Mention
Louise Ridderström Honorable Mention
2012-13
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 1st Team
Lee Lopez 2nd Team
Ani Gulugian Honorable Mention
CONFERENCE HONORS
2011-12
Erynne Lee 1st Team
Lee Lopez 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 1st Team
Ani Gulugian 2nd Team
Brianna Do Honorable Mention
2010-11
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Lee Lopez 1st Team
Tiffany Lua 1st Team
Ani Gulugian 2nd Team
Glory Yang 2nd Team
2009-10
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Sydnee Michaels 1st Team
Brianna Do 2nd Team
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2008-09
Stephanie Kono 1st Team
Glory Yang 1st Team
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
Sydnee Michaels 2nd Team
Mariajo Uribe 2nd Team
Ryann O’Toole Honorable Mention
2007-08
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Glory Yang 1st Team
Sydnee Michaels 2nd Team
Mariajo Uribe 2nd Team
2006-07
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Hannah Jun 2nd Team
Ryann O’Toole Honorable Mention
2005-06
Tiffany Joh 1st Team
Jane Park 1st Team
Amie Cochran 2nd Team
Susie Mathews Honorable Mention
2004-05
Amie Cochran
Susie Mathews
Charlotte Mayorkas
Hannah Jun Honorable Mention
2003-04
Charlotte Mayorkas
Hannah Jun
Susie Mathews
Krystal Shearer
Gina Umeck Honorable Mention
2002-03
Charlotte Mayorkas
Susie Mathews
Hana Kim Honorable Mention
Gina Umeck Honorable Mention
2001-02
Yvonne Choe
Alicia Um
Gina Umeck Honorable Mention
2000-01
Saki Uechi
Umeck
Notes: Tiffany Joh, Erynne Lee and Tiffany Lua are UCLA’s only student-athletes to be named to an all-conference team four times in a career (does not include honorable mention).
Lee is the only Bruin to be named to an All-Pac-12 First Team four times while six Bruins have been named to the All-Pac-12 First Team three times: Joh, Lua, Mariel Galdiano, Stephanie Kono, Charlotte Mayorkas and Lilia Vu.
BIG TEN GOLFER OF THE WEEK
Name
Francesca Fiorellini
PAC-12 GOLFER OF THE WEEK
Name
Zoe Antoinette Campos
Date
Feb. 27, 2025
Date
April 2, 2024
Zoe Antoinette Campos March 12, 2024
Zoe Antoinette Campos Feb. 27, 2024
Zoe Antoinette Campos April 11, 2023
Zoe Antoinette Campos April 4, 2023
Notes: The Pac-12 Conference switched to weekly awards in 2022-2023.
CONFERENCE & MISCELLANEOUS HONORS
PAC-12 GOLFER OF THE MONTH
Name Month
Patty Tavatanakit
Patty Tavatanakit
Lilia Vu
Lilia Vu
Lilia Vu
Lilia Vu
Lilia Vu
Bronte Law
Bronte Law
Bronte Law
Alison Lee
Bronte Law
Alison Lee
Alison Lee
Alison Lee
PAC-10/12 ALL-ACADEMIC
2019-20 (no team designations)
Clare Legaspi
2018-19
Mariel Galdiano
September 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
November 2017
April 2017
March 2017
November 2016
October 2015
February 2015
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
April 2014
October 2013
Honorable Mention
Clare Legaspi Honorable Mention
Beth Wu Honorable Mention
2017-18
Erin Choi Honorable Mention
Mariel Galdiano Honorable Mention
Clare Legaspi Honorable Mention
2015-16
Louise Ridderström 2nd Team
Erin Choi Honorable Mention
Lydia Choi Honorable Mention
Bronte Law Honorable Mention
2014-15
Bronte Law
Erynne Lee
Honorable Mention
Honorable Mention
Louise Ridderström Honorable Mention
2013-14
Ani Gulugian
Honorable Mention
Erynne Lee Honorable Mention
Louise Ridderström Honorable Mention
2012-13
Tiffany Lua 2nd Team
Erynne Lee Honorable Mention
Lee Lopez Honorable Mention
2011-12
Lee Lopez Honorable Mention
Tiffany Lua Honorable Mention
2010-11
Stephanie Kono 2nd Team
Lee Lopez Honorable Mention
Tiffany Lua Honorable Mention
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2009-10
Stephanie Kono Honorable Mention
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2008-09
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
Mariajo Uribe 2nd Team
Glory Yang Honorable Mention
2007-08
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
2006-07
Tiffany Joh 2nd Team
2005-06
Susie Mathews
1st Team
Susie Mathews
Melissa Martin Honorable Mention
Susie Mathews 1st Team
Bridget Dwyer 2nd Team
Gina Umeck 2nd Team
2002-03
Gina Umeck 1st Team
Bridget Dwyer 2nd Team
Melissa Martin Honorable Mention
2001-02
Gina Umeck 2nd Team
Melissa Martin Honorable Mention
Kristin Thompson Honorable Mention
2000-01
Laura Moffat 2nd Team
1999-00
Laura Moffat
1998-99
Alexandra Gasser
1995-96
Jeong
Brianna Loyear 2nd Team 2004-05
MULTIPLE PAC-10/12 ALL-ACADEMIC AWARDS
3 Tiffany Joh, Erynne Lee, Clare Legaspi, Lee Lopez, Tiffany Lua, Melissa Martin, Susie Mathews, Louise Ridderström, Gina Umeck, Glory Yang
2 Elizabeth Bowman, Erin Choi, Bridget Dwyer, Mariel Galdiano, Stephanie Kono, Bronte Law, Laura Moffat
MULTIPLE PAC-10/12 1ST TEAM ALL-ACADEMIC AWARDS
2
Susie Mathews
CONFERENCE COACHES OF THE YEAR
Name
Year
Carrie Forsyth 2017-18 (Pac-12)
Carrie Forsyth 2011-12 (Pac-12)
Carrie Forsyth 2010-11 (Pac-10)
Carrie Forsyth 2004-05 (Pac-10)
Carrie Forsyth 2003-04 (Pac-10)
Carrie Forsyth 2001-02 (Pac-10)
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann 1990-91 (Pac-10)
Jackie Tobian-Steinmann 1989-90 (Pac-10)
GOLFSTAT CUP (best scoring average)
Bronte Law 2015-2016
Alison Lee 2013-2014
U.S. WOMEN’S AMATEUR CHAMPS
Mariajo Uribe
Jane Park 2004
Kay Cockerill 1987, 1986
U.S. WOMEN’S AMATEUR SEMIFINALISTS
Annabel Wilson 2022
Lilia Vu 2017
Beth Wu 2015
Alison Lee 2014
Tiffany Lua 2009
Erynne Lee 2008
Mariajo Uribe 2007 (Champ)
Jane Park 2004 (Champ), 2003
Yvonne Choe 2000
Kay Cockerill 1987 (Champ), 1986 (Champ)
U.S. WOMEN’S AMATEUR PUBLINKS CHAMPS
Brianna Do 2011
Tiffany Joh 2008
Tiffany Joh 2006
Mary Enright 1981
CALIFORNIA STATE AMATEUR CHAMPS
Natatalie Vo 2024
Kate Villegas 2023
Ty Akabane 2018
Cindy Schole eld 1986
Mary Enright 1980
HONDA SPORT AWARD NOMINEES
Lilia Vu
Bronte Law
Bronte Law
Alison Lee 2013-14
Tiffany Joh
Amie Cochran
Susie Mathews 2003-04
Charlotte Mayorkas 2003-04
Kathy Choi 1995-96
Christy Erb 1990-91
Jean Zedlitz 1988-89
Kay Cockerill 1985-1986
CSC/COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA
Kay Cockerill 1986 (Honorable Mention)
CSC/COSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-DISTRICT
Caroline Canales 2023 (At-Large)
Tiffany Joh 2009 (Second Team)
Tiffany Joh 2008 (Second Team)
Susie Mathews 2005 (Second Team)
Photo Insert: Patty Tavatanakit
TEAM WINS
122 TOURNAMENT WINS
ALL-TIME
Alicia Um Holmes (2023-Pres.) 5 Wins
Carrie Forsyth (1999-23) 74 Wins
Jackie Tobian-Stienmann (1977-99) 43 Wins
2024-25 (1)
Bruin Wave Invitational (+6, 870)
2023-24 (4)
Windy City Collegiate Classic (-32, 832)
The Match in the Desert (-17, 271)
Nanea Pac-12 Preview (-11, 865)
The Show (-6, 858)
2022-23 (2)
The Beach Invitational (+47, 911)
The Match in the Desert (-12, 276)
2021-22 (1)
Chambers Bay Invitational (+12, 876)
2018-19 (1)
Golfweek Conference Challenge (-32, 832)
Dual Match vs. Denver (E, 288)
2017-18 (7)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-3, 849)
Nanea Pac-12 Preview (-20, 564)
Battle at the Beach (-13, 839)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (+15, 867)
Wildcat Invitational (-17, 847)
Pac-12 Championships (-4, 860)
NCAA Championships - Stroke Play (+9, 1,161)
2016-17 (4)
Stanford Intercollegiate (+4, 572)
Gifford Great 8 Collegiate Match Play
Anuenue Spring Break Classic (-12, 852)
Pac-12 Championships (-2, 862)
2015-16 (5)
Nanea Pac-12 Preview (+1, 877)
Bruin Wave Invitational (+4, 868)
Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic (-2, 286)
PING/ASU Invitational (-12, 852)
NCAA Championships - Stroke Play (-8, 1,144)
2014-15 (1)
Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic
2013-14 (4)
(+13, 301)
Mason Rudolph Classic (-14, 850)
Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational (-22, 842)
Allstate Sugar Bowl (-21, 843)
NCAA Stillwater Regional (+11, 875)
2012-13 (2)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (+18, 870)
Sugar Bowl Intercollegiate (+4, 580)
2011-12 (7)
Mason Rudolph Fall Preview (+9, 873)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-10, 842)
Rainbow Wahine Invitational (-15, 849)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (+16, 870)
PING/ASU Invitational (+5, 857)
Paci c Coast Intercollegiate (-15, 849)
NCAA Erie Regional (+9, 873)
2010-11 (6)
Landfall Tradition
2008-09 (7)
Topy Cup
(+16, 880)
Pac-10/SEC Challenge (+4, 856)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-4, 860)
PING/ASU Invitational (-1, 863)
NCAA Notre Dame Regional (+26, 890)
NCAA Championships (+21, 1,173)
2009-10 (2)
Betsy Rawls Invitational
(E, 864)
Mason Rudolph Invitational (-14, 850)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-8, 844)
Collegiate Match Play Championship - Stroke Play (-9, 567)
Arizona Wildcat Invitational (+5, 869)
UCF Challenge (-14, 850)
NCAA Columbus Regional (+13, 877)
2007-08 (4)
Mason Rudolph Championship (-13, 851)
Kent Youel Invitational (+17, 881)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (+24, 876)
NCAA Austin Regional (-3, 861)
2005-06 (5)
Dual Match vs. Stanford (+10, 298)
Las Vegas Founders Collegiate Showdown (-24, 840)
Lorena Ochoa Invitational (E, 864)
PING/ASU Invitational (+1, 865)
Pac-10 Championships (+15, 879)
2004-05 (6)
Kent Youel Invitational (-5, 859)
Arizona Wildcat Invitational (+12, 864)
SJSU Spartan Invitational (+16, 868)
PING/ASU Invitational (+6, 870)
Pac-10 Championships (+10, 874)
NCAA Las Cruces Regional (+25, 889)
2003-04 (6)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (+24, 876)
SJSU Spartan Invitational (-6, 858)
PING/ASU Invitational (-3, 861)
Pac-10 Championships
(+38, 902)
NCAA Stanford Regional (-3, 861)
NCAA Championships (-4, 1,148)
2001-02 (1)
NCAA Stanford Regional
2000-01 (2)
San Diego State Fall Classic
(+19, 883)
(+41, 905)
Rainbow Wahine Fall Classic (+35, 899)
1999-00 (1)
Rainbow Wahine Fall Classic
1995-96 (4)
Rolex Fall Preview
New Mexico Invitational
Stanford Invitational
San Diego State Classic
1994-95 (2)
(+59, 923)
(+15, 879)
(+8, 884)
(+13, 889)
(+21, 605)
BYU Invitational (891)
New Mexico Invitational (897)
1992-93 (2)
Oregon Invitational (902)
Arizona Invitational (896)
1991-92 (1)
Oregon Invitational (928)
1990-91 (5)
Bruin Desert Classic (611)
Golf World Invitational (895)
Pac-10 Championships (894)
California Collegiates (884)
NCAA Championships (1,197)
1989-90 (2)
BYU Invitational (906)
Pac-10 Championships (898)
1987-88 (1)
BYU Invitational (900)
1986-87 (1)
Hawaii Invitational (936)
1984-85 (2)
Weber State Invitational
(625)
Arizona Tournament (904)
* No records available prior to 1984-85 season
(+20, 884)
PING/ASU Invitational (-8, 856)
1985-86 (1)
BYU Invitational (906)
Ryann O’Toole
Eunice Choi
INDIVIDUAL WINS 96 INDIVIDUAL WINS
ALL-TIME
2024-25 (1)
Francesca Fiorellini (1)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-9, 207)
2023-24 (4)
Zoe Antoinette Campos (4)
Nanea Pac-12 Preview (-8, 211)
The Show (-7, 209)
PING/ASU Invitational (-9, 207)
NCAA Las Vegas Regional (-6, 210)
2022-23 (3)
Zoe Antoinette Campos (2)
Silverado Showdown (-5, 211)
Anuenue Spring Break Classic (-12, 204)
Caroline Canales (1)
The Match in the Desert (-7, 65)
2021-22 (1)
Emma Spitz (1)
Chambers Bay Invitational (-1, 215)
2020-21 (1)
Emma Spitz (1)
NCAA Louisville Regional (-8, 208)
2019-20 (1)
Emma Spitz (1)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-5, 211)
2018-19 (7)
Patty Tavatanakit (3)
ANNIKA Intercollegiate (-13, 203)
Dual Match vs. Denver (-5, 67)
NCAA East Lansing Regional (-8, 208)
Mariel Galdiano (2)
Golfweek Conference Challenge (-13, 203)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-8, 205)
Beth Wu (2)
Dual Match vs. Denver (-5, 67)
PING/ASU Invitational (-7, 209)
2017-18 (8)
Patty Tavatanakit (4)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-6, 207)
Silverado Showdown (-8, 208)
Pac-12 Championship (-8, 208)
NCAA San Francisco Regional (-8, 208)
Lilia Vu (4)
Battle at the Beach (-8, 205)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (-1, 212)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-1, 215)
Wildcat Invitational (-14, 202)
2016-17 (5)
Lilia Vu (4)
Bruin Wave Invitational (E, 219)
Anuenue Spring Break Classic (-12, 204)
Silverado Showdown (-8, 208)
Pac-12 Championship (-7, 209)
Bronte Law (1)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-7, 135)
2015-16 (5)
Bronte Law (3)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-8, 205)
PING/ASU Invitational (-12, 204)
NCAA Bryan Regional (-7, 209)
Louise Ridderström (2)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-3, 213)
Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic (-4, 68)
2014-15 (4)
Bronte Law (2)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-8, 205)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (-5, 208)
Alison Lee (1)
Pac-12 Preview (-10, 209)
Erynne Lee (1)
Bruin Wave Invitational (E, 216)
2013-14 (5)
Alison Lee (3)
Betsy Rawls Longhorn Invitational (-12, 204)
Stanford Intercollegiate (-7, 206)
Pac-12 Championship (-5, 211)
Bronte Law (1)
Pac-12 Preview (-8, 211)
Erynne Lee (1)
Mason Rudolph Classic (-7, 209)
2012-13 (1)
Erynne Lee (1)
Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge (E, 213)
2011-12 (3)
Ani Gulugian (1)
PING/ASU Invitational (-1, 212)
Erynne Lee (1)
Paci c Coast Intercollegiate (-9, 207)
Lee Lopez (1)
Rainbow Wahine Invitational (-15, 849)
2010-11 (3)
Stephanie Kono (1)
NCAA Notre Dame Regional (+2, 218)
Lee Lopez (1)
Bruin Wave Invitational (-4, 212)
Tiffany Lua (1)
Landfall Tradition (-2, 214)
2009-10 (1)
Stephanie Kono (1)
PING/ASU Invitational (-9, 207)
2008-09 (5)
Stephanie Kono (2)
Collegiate Match Play Championship - Stroke Play (-12, 132)