Oklahoma
Ranking: No. 1 seed
Strength: Vault
Weakness: Bars
X-Factor: Addison Fatta
Oklahoma is dominant.
The Sooners were the No. 1 squad in the nation for nine weeks in a row during the regular season, owning an NQS of 197.980 and top-five rankings on every event.
No. 3 seed UCLA women’s water polo (18-3, 4-2 MPSF) will begin its postseason campaign against No. 6 seed Indiana (15-9, 1-5) in the MPSF tournament commencing at the Spieker Aquatics Complex in Berkeley on Friday.
A shutout win may be the perfect conclusion to a series sweep.
And No. 9 UCLA softball (33-5, 13-2 Big Ten) did just that, defeating Indiana (27-10, 7-5) 4-0 on Sunday at Easton Stadium, completing the conference homestand sweep.
Crack.
The ball went soaring, and with it, any doubts.
Another home run, another tally into the unblemished home record.
No. 9 UCLA softball (31-5, 11-2 Big Ten) bested Indiana (27-8, 7-3) 5-4 at Easton Stadium on Friday.
No. 4 seed UCLA gymnastics is postseason bound and will open regional competition Friday in Corvallis, Oregon. The Bruins must advance through quad meets – with the top two teams reaching Sunday’s regional final – and the top two there earning a trip to Fort Worth, Texas for the championships.
The time has come to say goodbye.
Seniors Jordan Chiles, Ciena Alipio and Madisyn Anyimi, along with graduate student Carissa Clay, are set for their final meet at Pauley Pavilion.
Big Ten regular season champions? Check.
Attendance records? Shattered.
And just a few more tests stand in the way of the postseason.
No. 5 UCLA gymnastics (13-2, 9-0 Big Ten) will travel to Maples Pavilion in Palo Alto, California, to face No.
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