Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Photo

<p>Once thought to be out of the championship picture, the
women&#8217;s water polo team stormed bac

Once thought to be out of the championship picture, the women’s water polo team stormed bac

Photo

<p>Redshirt junior Kelly Rulon scored four goals in the
championship match, showing why she was the

Redshirt junior Kelly Rulon scored four goals in the championship match, showing why she was the

Back-to-back champions

Women’s water polo reprises last season’s tournament win, earning UCLA’s 99th NCAA title

DAVIS — The site and image were eerily familiar to UCLA coach Adam Krikorian.

Watching his players yelp in elation in the middle of the Schaal Aquatics Center pool. Hearing the UCLA 8-clap resonate in the air. Feeling the crisp water through his hair, his face and clothes saturated with chlorinated water and tears of joy.

Ten years ago, Krikorian, who was an assistant coach at the time, witnessed the women’s water polo team capture its first national championship on the UC Davis campus.

He relived the moment on Sunday.

On a last-second shot by sophomore Courtney Mathewson, third-seeded UCLA sneaked past crosstown rival top-seeded USC 9-8, capturing back-to-back championships and eight national championships in 11 years.

After the game, Krikorian could not control his emotions. His comments were nostalgic.

“It’s really mumbled in my brain right now. It was chaotic,” Krikorian said.

“This program is way bigger than me. It has a lot to do with the girls that came first, like Nicolle Payne, and those girls that were on the 1996 team – they established an attitude, an aura that we have just carried along.”

This was the Bruins’ (29-4) second national-title-game meeting with the Trojans (27-3). UCLA won in their first meeting in 2000.

But to think – unlike a year ago – this Bruin team was not expected to win.

After going undefeated and recording 33-0 for the 2005 season, expectations were bestowed on this year’s UCLA team. Until the postseason, the Bruins struggled to live up to those expectations.

A Trojan team that strung together 26 straight wins appeared the favorite. A Stanford team that fell to the Bruins in the semifinal game was the most confident bunch heading into the NCAA Tournament.

But when it counted, the Bruins gnawed their way to a victory and UCLA’s 99th NCAA championship.

“This team had heart and leadership at the end,” said Ken Weiner, a senior associate athletic director, who was soaked head to toe when Krikorian pulled him into the pool. “I think (men’s volleyball coach) Al Scates rubbed off on him.”

In a game that saw six ties, 28 ejections and no more than a two-goal lead by any team, the Bruins were nursing an 8-7 lead with one final period. Shouts of “seven more minutes” echoed in the Bruin huddle during a break.

It seemed as though the Bruins were going to pull it out and that the nation’s water polo dynasty would once again celebrate a title victory.

But USC’s Patty Cardenas, who scored three goals, put a dent in the Bruins’ championship trophy hopes when she fired a shot from the left corner with 44 seconds remaining on the clock.

Cardenas, who scored in the exact same way earlier, tied the game up at 8-8.

“We know she’s deadly,” Krikorian said. “We still couldn’t stop her.”

The Bruins managed to get an ejection on their last possession of play, and Mathewson found herself wide open for the game-winning shot.

“I don’t remember everything,” said Mathewson after scoring her only goal of the tournament. “I had no idea how much time was left – I just got the ball and shot it. My teammates had faith in me.”

Though Mathewson sat in the limelight for her last-second heroics, it was redshirt junior Kelly Rulon who put the Bruins in position to win.

Rulon, who was named the NCAA Tournament’s MVP, finished with a game-high four goals. This is her second season scoring 70 goals, which sits as second-best in UCLA’s all-time scoring list (Coralie Simmons holds the record of 74 goals).

The Bruins started right out the gate in large part because Rulon recorded a hat trick in the first period, scoring on a four-meter penalty shot that was created by junior Kacy Kunkel and two outside goals that slipped past Trojan goalkeeper Whitney Morgan. The Bruins held a 3-2 lead at the end of the first period.

With her 11 goals over the past three games, Rulon surpassed Loyola Marymount’s Stacia Peterson on the list of goals scored in a single NCAA Tournament. Peterson scored 10 goals in last year’s NCAA Tournament.

Rulon was too modest to speak about her individual accomplishments, so senior Thalia Munro spoke on her behalf.

“When I think of Kelly, I think of her playing her best when it’s needed,” Munro said. “The tougher it gets, the better (she) plays. She’s a clutch player. The recognition she’s getting is very deserving.”

The second period was brimming with goals. It was also all about the Trojans’ ability to draw ejections on the Bruins.

In that period alone, USC had five 6-on-5 opportunities and the Trojans connected on two. However, the Trojans finished a pitiful 2-for-17 to UCLA’s 5-for-11 on man-advantage plays.

Foothill High School lefty standout Brittany Hayes scored one of the Trojans’ man-advantages with a goal with 1:30 to goal for their first lead, 5-4.

Not to be outdone, UCLA’s Gabrielle Domanic, a teammate of Hayes at Foothill, tied up the game seconds later at 5-5. Hayes would get the final say with a rocket before the half ended, scoring with one second remaining for the 6-5 lead at half.

“It took something out of us. It was a momentum-killer,” Krikorian said. “But for as many ejections as they had and for us to stay even, (it was positive for us) going into halftime.”

The Bruin defense tightened up in the third period, allowing just one goal. UCLA goalkeeper Emily Feher had a tremendous weekend, recording 18 saves, with four against the Trojans.

“This weekend was so amazing. All three games we played were awesome,” Feher said. “The desire and fight we had was amazing, even when no one expected us to win like last year.”

As UCLA celebrated its fifth national championship in seven years, the players couldn’t be more elated.

“It was the best feeling I’ve ever had,” said senior Kristina Kunkel, whose voice was raspy from screaming. “I couldn’t ask for anything else. I couldn’t have gone out in a better way.”

As good as two championships in a row sounds, three has an even more pleasing ring. The Bruins have accomplished that feat only once before, from 1996 to 1998. And with this program, it’s not that farfetched.

“We’re missing a lot of players next season,” said Krikorian, who won his fifth national title as the women’s water polo coach. “But I wouldn’t put it past this team.”

VAVIC ANGRY: USC coach Jovan Vavic declined to comment after the game and stormed off without addressing the media. However, before leaving Vavic did complain to NCAA officials who happened to be watching the awards ceremony.

“The referees should not determine the outcome of the game,” Vavic said.

HPC Winter 09 Button