University of California, Los Angeles, Athletics

Kayla Chung
Photo by: Kyla Henderson
Women's Tennis Set to Host San Diego, LMU
February 11, 2026 | Women's Tennis
MATCH INFORMATION
Opponent: San Diego
Venue: Los Angeles Tennis Center
Date: Saturday, Feb. 14
Time: 12 p.m. PT
Watch / Live Scoring: https://uclabruins.com/sports/2020/1/13/ucla-tennis-live-stats-w
Opponent: LMU
Venue: Los Angeles Tennis Center
Date: Tuesday, Feb 17
Time: 1 p.m. PT
Watch / Live Scoring: https://uclabruins.com/sports/2020/1/13/ucla-tennis-live-stats-w
No. 17 UCLA women's tennis returns to Los Angeles Tennis Center Saturday for its first of two home contests against West Coast Conference teams. The Bruins (3-2) first meet San Diego (3-3) in a Valentine's Day clash, with first serve scheduled for 12 p.m. PT. Then, in a newly-added match, UCLA takes on LMU (4-2) Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 1 p.m.
FOLLOW LIVE
Fans unable to attend home UCLA women's tennis matches can still follow live. Up-to-the-second scoring and streaming are available for all matches played at Los Angeles Tennis Center HERE. Additionally, in-match updates for home and road contests can be found on the UCLA women's tennis X account.
PAST MATCHUPS
Series vs. San Diego: UCLA leads 18-0
Most Recent vs. San Diego: UCLA won 7-0 on Feb. 13, 2021 (Recap)
Series vs. LMU: UCLA leads 29-1
Most Recent vs. LMU: UCLA won 7-0 on Jan. 21, 2025 (Recap)
LAST TIME OUT
UCLA earned a split against two top-25 teams in Northern California. The Bruins, who entered action slotted at No. 17 in the ITA team rankings, came up short against 16th-ranked California (Jan. 30) before bouncing back to blank No. 11 Stanford (Jan. 31). Mayu Crossley, Bianca Fernandez and Ahmani Guichard earned singles wins at Cal, with Crossley beating No. 9 Berta Passola Folch in three sets. These results were not enough, though, as the Golden Bears earned the doubles point and matched the Bruins with three singles victories. Johanne Svendsen clinched the decision at 4-2. The next day, UCLA jumped out to a lead when Crossley and Kayla Chung teamed to clinch the doubles point. The all-freshman pair trailed 0-4 before securing the final six games. The Bruins would ultimately complete their program's second 7-0 shutout of the Cardinal (2021) dating back to 1986. Crossley collected her second top-20 singles victory of the weekend, while Guichard and Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer joined her in posting two-win days. Olivia Center delivered the deciding victory.
IN THE RANKINGS
Team (Jan. 28): No. 17 UCLA
Singles (Feb. 4): No. 37 Mayu Crossley*, No. 79 Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer, No. 119 Kate Fakih
Doubles (Feb. 4): No. 64 Olivia Center/Kate Fakih
* - career high
CROSSLEY EARNS SWEEP OF B1G WEEKLY AWARDS
Mayu Crossley earned both Big Ten Conference women's tennis weekly awards Feb. 4, collecting the Player of the Week and Freshman of the Week honors. She became the first player to accomplish the feat this season. Crossley had a Northern California trip to remember, knocking off a pair of top-20 singles opponents as the 17th-ranked Bruins split against No. 16 California (Jan. 30) and No. 11 Stanford (Jan. 31). The Tokyo native also helped clinch a doubles point. She started by beating this past fall's NCAA singles runner-up, ninth-ranked Berta Passola Folch of Cal, 5-7, 6-2, 6-0. The win avenged a 6-1, 6-1 result Passola Folch posted over Crossley during the individual tournament. In UCLA's 7-0 triumph over Stanford the next day, Crossley had a hand in her team's first two points. The all-freshman doubles duo of Crossley/Kayla Chung dug itself out of a 0-4 hole, clinching the initial point with a 6-4 decision and improving to 1-1 on the weekend. Crossley then pushed the lead to 2-0, putting on a 6-3, 6-1 display versus No. 18 Alyssa Ahn.
FALL RECAP
The Bruins completed the individual portion of their 2025-26 schedule with a number of standout performances to show for it. Ahmani Guichard had a well-rounded run through the fall, posting team highs of six singles wins (6-3) and five doubles victories (5-2). Freshman Mayu Crossley qualified for the NCAA Championship singles tournament, earning her spot by reaching the ITA West Sectional Championships semifinal round. Kate Fakih had a team-best two ranked singles wins, knocking off a pair of top-50 counterparts at the ITA All-American Championships. She also teamed with Guichard to claim the ITA West Sectionals doubles consolation title. Fakih (5-4) and freshman Kayla Chung (5-2) won five singles matches each.
2025-26 AWARD WATCH
Guichard Named a Big Ten Women's Tennis Player to Watch โ Jan. 5
Crossley Earns Big Ten Freshman of the Week Award โ Nov. 17, 2025
Guichard Voted Big Ten Player of the Week to Start New Season โ Sept. 24, 2025
2024-25 IN REVIEW
Unseeded despite winning nine of its final 10 matches going into NCAA Championship play, UCLA (18-9, 10-3 in Big Ten play) made the tournament's round of 16 by outlasting host and 15th-seeded Vanderbilt in a 4-3 thriller. There were also a number of individual highlights for the Bruins, who saw Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer take a big step forward. She received All-Big Ten First Team recognition and was named the ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch after taking over the top singles court. Olivia Center and Kate Fakih (ITA Southwest Region Rookie of the Year) teamed for a runner-up finish at the NCAA Championship doubles tournament, earning the freshmen All-America honors.
WHO'S BACK?
Kate Fakih and Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer each bring more than 50 combined singles and doubles wins back from the 2024-25 UCLA roster. The sophomore doubles connection of Fakih and Olivia Center, who also returns, logged a team-best 31-9 record and reached the NCAA Championship doubles final during its debut season. The pair recorded 13 ranked wins and each was tabbed an All-American. Fakih coupled that showing with a 28-11 singles mark to lead the Bruins. Lutkemeyer's breakout junior campaign saw her go 27-10 in singles matches and 29-10 in doubles contests. She found her home on the top singles court and beat a team-leading 13 ranked players. Ahmani Guichard, another returner, was Lutkemeyer's most frequent doubles partner and a stalwart contributor to the singles lineup. Bianca Fernandez also brings multiple completed dual-match results back into the fold.
WHO'S NEW?
Freshmen Kayla Chung, Mayu Crossley and Rona Rugara debut for the Bruins in 2025-26. Chung's (Stanton, Calif. / The Pennsylvania Leadership Charter School) résumé includes the Girls' 16 doubles championship at the 2023 Easter Bowl in Indian Well, Calif. alongside Alanis Hamilton. The pair also registered runner-up finishes at the 2023 Billie Jean King National Championships in San Diego and at the 2023 FILA International Junior Championships in Indian Wells. Crossley (Tokyo, Japan / Grandview Preparatory School [FL]) participated in each Grand Slam, playing singles and doubles at each, as a junior. She also achieved a career-high ITF junior ranking of No. 5 in 2023. Rugara (Johannesburg, South Africa / Florida Virtual School) picked up nine ITF junior titles from 2023-25. She also teamed with Roxy Bredenkamp to capture the women's doubles title at the 2025 Mbombela Open in Mbombela, South Africa.
BRUINS ON TOUR
Ena Shibahara, who played for UCLA during the 2016-17 and 2017-18 seasons, has starred in doubles tournaments throughout her professional career and saw her career-high singles ranking rise from No. 503 in 2024 to No. 116 in 2025. She made her Grand Slam singles debut at the 2024 US Open, reaching the main draw as a qualifier before taking down Australia's Daria Saville in three sets. Shibahara advanced through singles qualifying again at the 2025 US Open and nearly accomplished the same feat at Wimbledon. She made her first WTA Tour singles quarterfinal at the 2025 ATX Open, beating then-No. 76 Kimberly Birrell of Australia to get there. Shibahara earned her first Grand Slam championship in 2022, teaming with Wesley Koolhof to seize the mixed doubles title at Roland-Garros. Shibahara made her first major women's doubles final round alongside Shuko Aoyama at the 2023 Australian Open. Shibahara/Aoyama was the last pair standing at the 2023 National Bank Open in Toronto, giving each player her second WTA 1000 championship. Shibahara climbed to a career-best No. 4 position in the WTA's doubles rankings in March 2022 and currently sits at No. 60.
A STELLAR 30 YEARS FOR STELLA
The 2025-26 season represents Stella Sampras Webster's 30th as head coach of the UCLA women's tennis program. The second-longest-tenured active head coach at UCLA behind men's tennis head coach Billy Martin, Sampras Webster has compiled an impressive overall record of 545-203 (.729) at the helm of her alma mater. Sampras Webster collected the 500th win of her illustrious career when the Bruins defeated UC San Diego on April 18, 2023. She has guided UCLA to NCAA championships in 2014 and 2008, the first two in program history, and all three of its conference titles: 2024, 2021 and 2008 while in the Pac-12. Sampras Webster's teams have finished top-10 nationally in 23 of her 28 completed seasons and in the top five 16 times. Four NCAA individual championships have been won under her watch: Tian Fangran in 2023, Gabby Andrews/Ayan Broomfield in 2019, Tracy Lin/Riza Zalameda in 2008 and Daniela Bercek/Lauren Fisher in 2004. Sampras Webster is a four-time Wilson ITA Southwest Regional Coach of the Year โ in 2024, 2021, 2012 and 2000 โ and earned the national award in 2012. She was a four-time All-America honoree during her playing days at UCLA and as a freshman won the 1988 NCAA doubles title alongside Allyson Cooper. Following her professional career, Sampras Webster spent four seasons (1993-96) on the staff of friend and mentor Bill Zaima before taking the reins. Sampras Webster was inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame in 2018.
Opponent: San Diego
Venue: Los Angeles Tennis Center
Date: Saturday, Feb. 14
Time: 12 p.m. PT
Watch / Live Scoring: https://uclabruins.com/sports/2020/1/13/ucla-tennis-live-stats-w
Opponent: LMU
Venue: Los Angeles Tennis Center
Date: Tuesday, Feb 17
Time: 1 p.m. PT
Watch / Live Scoring: https://uclabruins.com/sports/2020/1/13/ucla-tennis-live-stats-w
No. 17 UCLA women's tennis returns to Los Angeles Tennis Center Saturday for its first of two home contests against West Coast Conference teams. The Bruins (3-2) first meet San Diego (3-3) in a Valentine's Day clash, with first serve scheduled for 12 p.m. PT. Then, in a newly-added match, UCLA takes on LMU (4-2) Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 1 p.m.
FOLLOW LIVE
Fans unable to attend home UCLA women's tennis matches can still follow live. Up-to-the-second scoring and streaming are available for all matches played at Los Angeles Tennis Center HERE. Additionally, in-match updates for home and road contests can be found on the UCLA women's tennis X account.
PAST MATCHUPS
Series vs. San Diego: UCLA leads 18-0
Most Recent vs. San Diego: UCLA won 7-0 on Feb. 13, 2021 (Recap)
Series vs. LMU: UCLA leads 29-1
Most Recent vs. LMU: UCLA won 7-0 on Jan. 21, 2025 (Recap)
LAST TIME OUT
UCLA earned a split against two top-25 teams in Northern California. The Bruins, who entered action slotted at No. 17 in the ITA team rankings, came up short against 16th-ranked California (Jan. 30) before bouncing back to blank No. 11 Stanford (Jan. 31). Mayu Crossley, Bianca Fernandez and Ahmani Guichard earned singles wins at Cal, with Crossley beating No. 9 Berta Passola Folch in three sets. These results were not enough, though, as the Golden Bears earned the doubles point and matched the Bruins with three singles victories. Johanne Svendsen clinched the decision at 4-2. The next day, UCLA jumped out to a lead when Crossley and Kayla Chung teamed to clinch the doubles point. The all-freshman pair trailed 0-4 before securing the final six games. The Bruins would ultimately complete their program's second 7-0 shutout of the Cardinal (2021) dating back to 1986. Crossley collected her second top-20 singles victory of the weekend, while Guichard and Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer joined her in posting two-win days. Olivia Center delivered the deciding victory.
IN THE RANKINGS
Team (Jan. 28): No. 17 UCLA
Singles (Feb. 4): No. 37 Mayu Crossley*, No. 79 Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer, No. 119 Kate Fakih
Doubles (Feb. 4): No. 64 Olivia Center/Kate Fakih
* - career high
CROSSLEY EARNS SWEEP OF B1G WEEKLY AWARDS
Mayu Crossley earned both Big Ten Conference women's tennis weekly awards Feb. 4, collecting the Player of the Week and Freshman of the Week honors. She became the first player to accomplish the feat this season. Crossley had a Northern California trip to remember, knocking off a pair of top-20 singles opponents as the 17th-ranked Bruins split against No. 16 California (Jan. 30) and No. 11 Stanford (Jan. 31). The Tokyo native also helped clinch a doubles point. She started by beating this past fall's NCAA singles runner-up, ninth-ranked Berta Passola Folch of Cal, 5-7, 6-2, 6-0. The win avenged a 6-1, 6-1 result Passola Folch posted over Crossley during the individual tournament. In UCLA's 7-0 triumph over Stanford the next day, Crossley had a hand in her team's first two points. The all-freshman doubles duo of Crossley/Kayla Chung dug itself out of a 0-4 hole, clinching the initial point with a 6-4 decision and improving to 1-1 on the weekend. Crossley then pushed the lead to 2-0, putting on a 6-3, 6-1 display versus No. 18 Alyssa Ahn.
FALL RECAP
The Bruins completed the individual portion of their 2025-26 schedule with a number of standout performances to show for it. Ahmani Guichard had a well-rounded run through the fall, posting team highs of six singles wins (6-3) and five doubles victories (5-2). Freshman Mayu Crossley qualified for the NCAA Championship singles tournament, earning her spot by reaching the ITA West Sectional Championships semifinal round. Kate Fakih had a team-best two ranked singles wins, knocking off a pair of top-50 counterparts at the ITA All-American Championships. She also teamed with Guichard to claim the ITA West Sectionals doubles consolation title. Fakih (5-4) and freshman Kayla Chung (5-2) won five singles matches each.
2025-26 AWARD WATCH
Guichard Named a Big Ten Women's Tennis Player to Watch โ Jan. 5
Crossley Earns Big Ten Freshman of the Week Award โ Nov. 17, 2025
Guichard Voted Big Ten Player of the Week to Start New Season โ Sept. 24, 2025
2024-25 IN REVIEW
Unseeded despite winning nine of its final 10 matches going into NCAA Championship play, UCLA (18-9, 10-3 in Big Ten play) made the tournament's round of 16 by outlasting host and 15th-seeded Vanderbilt in a 4-3 thriller. There were also a number of individual highlights for the Bruins, who saw Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer take a big step forward. She received All-Big Ten First Team recognition and was named the ITA Southwest Region Player to Watch after taking over the top singles court. Olivia Center and Kate Fakih (ITA Southwest Region Rookie of the Year) teamed for a runner-up finish at the NCAA Championship doubles tournament, earning the freshmen All-America honors.
WHO'S BACK?
Kate Fakih and Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer each bring more than 50 combined singles and doubles wins back from the 2024-25 UCLA roster. The sophomore doubles connection of Fakih and Olivia Center, who also returns, logged a team-best 31-9 record and reached the NCAA Championship doubles final during its debut season. The pair recorded 13 ranked wins and each was tabbed an All-American. Fakih coupled that showing with a 28-11 singles mark to lead the Bruins. Lutkemeyer's breakout junior campaign saw her go 27-10 in singles matches and 29-10 in doubles contests. She found her home on the top singles court and beat a team-leading 13 ranked players. Ahmani Guichard, another returner, was Lutkemeyer's most frequent doubles partner and a stalwart contributor to the singles lineup. Bianca Fernandez also brings multiple completed dual-match results back into the fold.
WHO'S NEW?
Freshmen Kayla Chung, Mayu Crossley and Rona Rugara debut for the Bruins in 2025-26. Chung's (Stanton, Calif. / The Pennsylvania Leadership Charter School) résumé includes the Girls' 16 doubles championship at the 2023 Easter Bowl in Indian Well, Calif. alongside Alanis Hamilton. The pair also registered runner-up finishes at the 2023 Billie Jean King National Championships in San Diego and at the 2023 FILA International Junior Championships in Indian Wells. Crossley (Tokyo, Japan / Grandview Preparatory School [FL]) participated in each Grand Slam, playing singles and doubles at each, as a junior. She also achieved a career-high ITF junior ranking of No. 5 in 2023. Rugara (Johannesburg, South Africa / Florida Virtual School) picked up nine ITF junior titles from 2023-25. She also teamed with Roxy Bredenkamp to capture the women's doubles title at the 2025 Mbombela Open in Mbombela, South Africa.
BRUINS ON TOUR
Ena Shibahara, who played for UCLA during the 2016-17 and 2017-18 seasons, has starred in doubles tournaments throughout her professional career and saw her career-high singles ranking rise from No. 503 in 2024 to No. 116 in 2025. She made her Grand Slam singles debut at the 2024 US Open, reaching the main draw as a qualifier before taking down Australia's Daria Saville in three sets. Shibahara advanced through singles qualifying again at the 2025 US Open and nearly accomplished the same feat at Wimbledon. She made her first WTA Tour singles quarterfinal at the 2025 ATX Open, beating then-No. 76 Kimberly Birrell of Australia to get there. Shibahara earned her first Grand Slam championship in 2022, teaming with Wesley Koolhof to seize the mixed doubles title at Roland-Garros. Shibahara made her first major women's doubles final round alongside Shuko Aoyama at the 2023 Australian Open. Shibahara/Aoyama was the last pair standing at the 2023 National Bank Open in Toronto, giving each player her second WTA 1000 championship. Shibahara climbed to a career-best No. 4 position in the WTA's doubles rankings in March 2022 and currently sits at No. 60.
A STELLAR 30 YEARS FOR STELLA
The 2025-26 season represents Stella Sampras Webster's 30th as head coach of the UCLA women's tennis program. The second-longest-tenured active head coach at UCLA behind men's tennis head coach Billy Martin, Sampras Webster has compiled an impressive overall record of 545-203 (.729) at the helm of her alma mater. Sampras Webster collected the 500th win of her illustrious career when the Bruins defeated UC San Diego on April 18, 2023. She has guided UCLA to NCAA championships in 2014 and 2008, the first two in program history, and all three of its conference titles: 2024, 2021 and 2008 while in the Pac-12. Sampras Webster's teams have finished top-10 nationally in 23 of her 28 completed seasons and in the top five 16 times. Four NCAA individual championships have been won under her watch: Tian Fangran in 2023, Gabby Andrews/Ayan Broomfield in 2019, Tracy Lin/Riza Zalameda in 2008 and Daniela Bercek/Lauren Fisher in 2004. Sampras Webster is a four-time Wilson ITA Southwest Regional Coach of the Year โ in 2024, 2021, 2012 and 2000 โ and earned the national award in 2012. She was a four-time All-America honoree during her playing days at UCLA and as a freshman won the 1988 NCAA doubles title alongside Allyson Cooper. Following her professional career, Sampras Webster spent four seasons (1993-96) on the staff of friend and mentor Bill Zaima before taking the reins. Sampras Webster was inducted into the UCLA Athletic Hall of Fame in 2018.
Players Mentioned
UCLA W. Tennis Postmatch - Olivia Center & Kate Fakih (Nov. 23, 2024)
Sunday, November 24
Media Availability - Coach Sampras Webster (May 15, 2024)
Thursday, May 16
NCAA First and Second Rounds
Friday, May 03
Postmatch Interviews: Fangran Tian/Rance Brown (May 27, 2023)
Saturday, May 27

















