
Brooklyn Moors
Photo by: Don Liebig, UCLA Photography
UCLA Begins NCAA Regional Competition Friday
April 02, 2024 | Gymnastics
No. 11 seed UCLA at NCAA Regionals
Date: Friday, April 5, 2024 – 1pm PT
Location: Berkeley, Calif. (Haas Pavilion)
First Round: Southern Utah vs. San Jose State, 2 p.m. PT
Second Round: UCLA, Denver, ASU, Washington,1 p.m. PT; Cal, Auburn, Stanford, SUU/SJSU: 7 p.m. PT
Regional Final: 5 p.m. PT
Broadcast: ESPN+
TV Talent: Bart Conner (play-by-play), Kathy Johnson Clarke (analyst)
Live Stats: virti.us
UCLA COMPETES AT CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
No. 11 seed UCLA (13-11) will compete against No. 6 seed Denver and Pac-12 foes Arizona State and Washington in the first session of the NCAA California Regional Second Round on Friday, April 5 at 1pm. Competing in the second session at 7pm will be No. 3 seed California, No. 14 seed Auburn, Stanford and the winner of Thursday's first round matchup between Southern Utah and San Jose State. The top two teams from each second round session will advance to the regional final on Sunday, April 7 at 5pm. The top two finishers in the final will advance to the NCAA Championships, along with the top individual all-arounder and event finishers not on a qualifying team.
FOLLOW LIVE
All sessions of the NCAA Regional will be broadcast live on ESPN+. Bart Conner and Kathy Johnson Clarke will call the second rounds and final. Live scoring links can be found at virti.us.
ROTATION ORDER
UCLA will begin competition on floor exercise then will move to vault and uneven bars before finishing on balance beam. Denver has Olympic order and will begin the meet on vault. Washington will begin on uneven bars, and Arizona State starts on balance beam.
REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY
The Bruins have won 24 NCAA Regional titles, most recently in 2019. At last season's regional final in Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom, the Bruins finished second to qualify for the NCAA Championships for the first time since 2019. This year's placement at the California Regional will mark the first time since 2016 at Utah that UCLA has competed at a Regional less than two time zones away.
PAC-12 CHAMPIONSHIPS PART 2
The California Regional will feature many of the same teams that just competed at the Pac-12 Championships on March 23. The first session of the second round will have UCLA, Arizona State and Washington, while California and Stanford will meet up in the second session. The Bruins had the highest finish among the teams at Pac-12s, finishing second. California was third, Stanford fourth, Arizona State sixth and Washington eighth.
IN THE RANKINGS
UCLA ranks No. 9 overall and in the Top 10 on all four events, standing at No. 6 on floor, No. 8 on vault and bars and No. 9 on beam. Individually, Selena Harris ranks No. 5 in the all-around, No. 1 on vault, No. 10 on bars, No. 13 on beam and No. 20 on floor. Emma Malabuyo ranks No. 16 on beam, Chae Campbell is No. 21 on vault, and Nya Reed ranks No. 23 on floor.
BRUINS EARN FIVE ALL-AMERICA, 10 ALL-CONFERENCE HONORS
Behind Selena Harris' four All-America and five All-Pac-12 honors, the Bruins combined to earn five regular season All-America and 10 All-Pac-12 honors in 2024. Harris was a first-team All-American in the all-around and on vault and a second-team selection on bars and beam. She also earned first-team All-Pac-12 honors in the all-around and all four events for the second consecutive year. Emma Malabuyo earned second-team All-America and honorable mention All-Pac-12 acclaim on beam. Chae Campbell was a first-team All-Pac-12 honoree on vault, and Nya Reed earned first-team All-Pac-12 honors on floor. Also receiving honorable mention All-Pac-12 acclaim were Katelyn Rosen in the all-around and Brooklyn Moors on floor.
HARRIS NAMED PAC-12 GYMNAST OF YEAR
UCLA sophomore Selena Harris was selected the Pac-12 Gymnast of the Year, the Bruins' 21st award and first since 2020 when Kyla Ross won her second consecutive. Harris, who won the Pac-12 all-around title with a conference championship record 39.825 score, is averaging 39.643 in the all-around this season, with a high of 39.900, and has compiled a total of eight all-around wins on the year. The Las Vegas native has four perfect 10s this season, three on vault and one on uneven bars, and five in her career. Harris has hit all 44 of her routines this season and all 99 in her career and leads the Bruin team with 28 event victories, 38 Top 3 finishes, and 30 scores of 9.900 or higher, including 22 scores of 9.950 or higher. She finished the regular season ranked No. 1 in the nation on vault, No. 5 in the all-around, No. 10 on uneven bars, No. 13 on balance beam and No. 20 on floor exercise. In the Pac-12, she ranks No. 1 on vault, No. 2 in the all-around, No. 4 on uneven bars and floor exercise and No. 6 on balance beam.
LAST TIME OUT
Selena Harris tied the Pac-12 Championships all-around record with a 39.825 to capture the final Pac-12 all-around title and also added individual titles on vault and bars to lead the Bruins to a 197.875 final score and second-place finish. Utah won the Pac-12 team title with a 198.000. California was third with a 197.325, and Stanford finished fourth with a 197.175. The Bruins started the meet with a strong 49.475 on balance beam and then grabbed a three-tenths of a point lead at the halfway mark thanks to a 49.625 on floor. Harris' 9.975 led the Bruins on vault, but their 49.375 was dwarfed by Utah's 49.700 on floor that moved the Utes ahead by .025. In the final rotation, UCLA finished up on uneven bars, while Utah ended on vault. The Bruins scored 49.400, with Harris scoring 9.950, Katelyn Rosen contributing a 9.900 and Margzetta Frazier adding a 9.875, but it was not enough to catch Utah, who closed with a 49.500 on vault, thanks to four scores of 9.900 or higher.
HISTORIC PERFORMANCE BY HARRIS
Sophomore Selena Harris had a historic performance against Clemson on March 16, posting the second-highest all-around total in school history with a 39.900. She started the meet by scoring perfect 10s on vault and bars, her third of the season on vault, and her first-ever perfect mark on bars. She also added 9.95s on beam and floor to help UCLA record a team total of 198.550, the third-highest team score in school history. Harris received a total of five 10.0 scores out of a possible eight from the judges, as she also earned a 10 from one of the two judges on floor. She now has five perfect 10s in under two years to rank No. 10 all-time at UCLA for most career 10s. Her performance led her to be chosen the Pac-12 Gymnast of the Week for the third time this season, and she was also named UCLA's Student-Athlete of the Week.
KATE THE GREAT
Katelyn Rosen is proving to be one of the top freshmen in the nation this season, averaging 39.417 in the all-around, with a high of 39.525 set Feb. 25 against Cal. Rosen has competed in the all-around in six meets and on at least two events in every meet. She has posted season-highs of 9.95 on beam and floor, 9.925 on bars and 9.9 on vault and has season averages of 9.8 or higher on all four events. The three-time Pac-12 Freshman/Newcomer of the Week winner has hit all 37 routines this season and scored 9.8 or higher on 33 of her 37 routines, including 14 in a row.
LEE-DOFF LOVE
Junior Emily Lee has mastered the leadoff position on beam since 2023 and has become just as solid as the leadoff on other events this year as well. On beam, she averages 9.877 as the first gymnast up and has scored 9.9 or higher seven times this year, including a career-high-tying 9.95 Feb. 25 vs. Cal and 9.925s in her last two meets. On vault, she averages 9.844 and picked up her first-ever vault victory with a 9.9 against Cal on the first routine of the meet. She has stuck her Yurchenko full five times this year. Lee was the leadoff on floor in four meets and scored a career-high-tying 9.9 against Cal, her third 9.9+ score of the meet.
CAMPBELL SCORES THIRD CAREER 10
Senior Chae Campbell returned to the floor lineup on March 16 against Clemson, marking her first appearance on the event since Jan. 27. In her return, she scored her third career perfect 10 and UCLA's first floor 10 of the year. It was her first 10 since March of 2022. She has competed on floor just six times this year but has three victories in those six meets. Campbell, who also scored a leadoff 9.900 on bars at the Clemson meet, was named Inside Gymnastics' Gymnast of the Week for Week 11. The senior from Carrollton, Texas has been strong on vault as well, earning first-team All-Pac-12 honors and ranking 21st in the nation with a NQS of 9.910. She has scored a perfect 9.95 twice this year and seven times in her career. She ranks second on the team in event victories with seven - three each on vault and floor and one on bars. This season, she has posted career-high marks on all four events with a 10.0 on floor, 9.95s on vault and bars and a 9.925 on beam.
MALABUYO BOOMING
Junior Emma Malabuyo has been outstanding for the Bruin on beam this season, averaging a team-high 9.911 and earning second-team regular season All-America honors. Malabuyo has competed in nine of the Bruins' 12 meets, missing three while competing on the World Cup circuit. She has six scores of 9.900 or higher, including three at 9.950 or higher. She tied for second place at the Pac-12 Championships with a 9.950. Malabuyo has also competed on bars eight times, with a career-high of 9.900 set at Denver on Jan. 21, and on floor in six meets, with a high of 9.925 on Feb. 4.
FRAZIER RETURNS TO FLOOR
Sixth-year senior Margzetta Frazier is back in the floor exercise lineup and back to scoring 9.9s on that event. She returned to floor on Senior Day March 16 and had a fairy tale final home meet, scoring personal bests of 9.975 on floor exercise and 9.950 on uneven bars. Frazier had been limited to strictly uneven bars all season due to an ankle injury before competing on floor in meet 11. She competed again at the Pac-12 Championships and scored 9.900. Frazier has hit 144 of 145 routines without a fall in her collegiate career, including an incredible streak of 133 consecutive hit routines from 2019 through 2024.
REED ALL ABOUT IT
Graduate transfer and six-time All-American Nya Reed has made a seamless transition into the Bruin program, competing on vault and floor in 11 meets this season and ranking No. 23 in the nation on floor. A first-team All-Pac-12 honoree on floor, she captured the Pac-12 Specialist of the Week award on Feb. 6 after her winning performances against Arizona, when she scored 9.95 on vault and 9.975 on floor. She averages 9.923 on floor and leads the team with nine scores of 9.9 or higher on the event. Reed, whose floor routine went viral earlier in the season, has three floor victories, including two in the last four meets, and has scored 9.9 or higher in all but one meet.
GIMME MOORS
Junior Brooklyn Moors has been one of the Bruins' most spectacular performers on floor exercise, earning honorable mention All-Pac-12 honors and scoring 9.900 or better in seven meets, with four scores of 9.950. She tied for second place at the Pac-12 Championships with a 9.950 and has two event victories on the year, winning floor at Oregon State and against Washington. The 2020 Canadian Olympian has competed on floor in 11 meets and averages 9.873.
ANDRES ON FIRE IN FIFTH YEAR
After seeing very limited action the last two seasons due to injuries, graduate student Emma Andres is having her most successful season in her fifth year. She has competed on floor in six of UCLA's last seven meets and is averaging 9.864, with two scores of 9.925, most recently Feb. 25 against Cal. She has competed on beam in all but the season's first meet and has scored a high of 9.900 twice - on her first-ever competitive beam routine at the Sprouts Collegiate Quad on Jan. 13 and March 9 at Arizona State. She has four other scores above 9.800.
FRESHMEN BREAK OUT
The freshman class of Katelyn Rosen, Alex Irvine and Paige Anastasi broke through in a big way in March. Rosen finished fourth in the all-around at the Pac-12 Championships with a career-best all-around score of 39.550. On March 9 at Arizona State, she captured her first two event victories of her career with a 39.450 in the all-around and 9.900 on vault and was subsequently awarded the Pac-12 Freshman of the Week for the third time this season. Against Clemson on March 16, she scored a career-high 9.950 on beam. Irvine had a career meet at Arizona State, hitting personal-bests on both events on which she competed. She captured first place on uneven bars with a 9.900, tied for fifth on vault with a 9.850 and also performed on beam for the first time in her collegiate career, hitting a 9.825 exhibition routine. Anastasi has been on a roll her last three meets. After scoring a career-high on vault at Arizona State with a leadoff stuck Yurchenko full, she upgraded her vault to a Yurchenko 1.5 against Clemson and stuck the vault for a career-best 9.925 to place third. She hit the 1.5 once again at the Pac-12 Championships, scoring 9.900 for the Bruins' second-best score.
HARRIS JOINS ELITE COMPANY
Sophomore Selena Harris became just the third Bruin ever to total three or more 9.95s in a meet in three consecutive competitions when she did so against Arizona on Feb. 4, Oregon State on Feb. 9 and Utah on Feb. 19. The only other Bruins to ever record three or more were Jordan Chiles (2023) and Mohini Bhardwaj (2001). Harris already has the second-most meets with three or more 9.95s, with six, including five this year. Jeanette Antolin holds the UCLA record with seven.
Date: Friday, April 5, 2024 – 1pm PT
Location: Berkeley, Calif. (Haas Pavilion)
First Round: Southern Utah vs. San Jose State, 2 p.m. PT
Second Round: UCLA, Denver, ASU, Washington,1 p.m. PT; Cal, Auburn, Stanford, SUU/SJSU: 7 p.m. PT
Regional Final: 5 p.m. PT
Broadcast: ESPN+
TV Talent: Bart Conner (play-by-play), Kathy Johnson Clarke (analyst)
Live Stats: virti.us
UCLA COMPETES AT CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
No. 11 seed UCLA (13-11) will compete against No. 6 seed Denver and Pac-12 foes Arizona State and Washington in the first session of the NCAA California Regional Second Round on Friday, April 5 at 1pm. Competing in the second session at 7pm will be No. 3 seed California, No. 14 seed Auburn, Stanford and the winner of Thursday's first round matchup between Southern Utah and San Jose State. The top two teams from each second round session will advance to the regional final on Sunday, April 7 at 5pm. The top two finishers in the final will advance to the NCAA Championships, along with the top individual all-arounder and event finishers not on a qualifying team.
FOLLOW LIVE
All sessions of the NCAA Regional will be broadcast live on ESPN+. Bart Conner and Kathy Johnson Clarke will call the second rounds and final. Live scoring links can be found at virti.us.
ROTATION ORDER
UCLA will begin competition on floor exercise then will move to vault and uneven bars before finishing on balance beam. Denver has Olympic order and will begin the meet on vault. Washington will begin on uneven bars, and Arizona State starts on balance beam.
REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY
The Bruins have won 24 NCAA Regional titles, most recently in 2019. At last season's regional final in Pauley Pavilion presented by Wescom, the Bruins finished second to qualify for the NCAA Championships for the first time since 2019. This year's placement at the California Regional will mark the first time since 2016 at Utah that UCLA has competed at a Regional less than two time zones away.
PAC-12 CHAMPIONSHIPS PART 2
The California Regional will feature many of the same teams that just competed at the Pac-12 Championships on March 23. The first session of the second round will have UCLA, Arizona State and Washington, while California and Stanford will meet up in the second session. The Bruins had the highest finish among the teams at Pac-12s, finishing second. California was third, Stanford fourth, Arizona State sixth and Washington eighth.
IN THE RANKINGS
UCLA ranks No. 9 overall and in the Top 10 on all four events, standing at No. 6 on floor, No. 8 on vault and bars and No. 9 on beam. Individually, Selena Harris ranks No. 5 in the all-around, No. 1 on vault, No. 10 on bars, No. 13 on beam and No. 20 on floor. Emma Malabuyo ranks No. 16 on beam, Chae Campbell is No. 21 on vault, and Nya Reed ranks No. 23 on floor.
BRUINS EARN FIVE ALL-AMERICA, 10 ALL-CONFERENCE HONORS
Behind Selena Harris' four All-America and five All-Pac-12 honors, the Bruins combined to earn five regular season All-America and 10 All-Pac-12 honors in 2024. Harris was a first-team All-American in the all-around and on vault and a second-team selection on bars and beam. She also earned first-team All-Pac-12 honors in the all-around and all four events for the second consecutive year. Emma Malabuyo earned second-team All-America and honorable mention All-Pac-12 acclaim on beam. Chae Campbell was a first-team All-Pac-12 honoree on vault, and Nya Reed earned first-team All-Pac-12 honors on floor. Also receiving honorable mention All-Pac-12 acclaim were Katelyn Rosen in the all-around and Brooklyn Moors on floor.
HARRIS NAMED PAC-12 GYMNAST OF YEAR
UCLA sophomore Selena Harris was selected the Pac-12 Gymnast of the Year, the Bruins' 21st award and first since 2020 when Kyla Ross won her second consecutive. Harris, who won the Pac-12 all-around title with a conference championship record 39.825 score, is averaging 39.643 in the all-around this season, with a high of 39.900, and has compiled a total of eight all-around wins on the year. The Las Vegas native has four perfect 10s this season, three on vault and one on uneven bars, and five in her career. Harris has hit all 44 of her routines this season and all 99 in her career and leads the Bruin team with 28 event victories, 38 Top 3 finishes, and 30 scores of 9.900 or higher, including 22 scores of 9.950 or higher. She finished the regular season ranked No. 1 in the nation on vault, No. 5 in the all-around, No. 10 on uneven bars, No. 13 on balance beam and No. 20 on floor exercise. In the Pac-12, she ranks No. 1 on vault, No. 2 in the all-around, No. 4 on uneven bars and floor exercise and No. 6 on balance beam.
LAST TIME OUT
Selena Harris tied the Pac-12 Championships all-around record with a 39.825 to capture the final Pac-12 all-around title and also added individual titles on vault and bars to lead the Bruins to a 197.875 final score and second-place finish. Utah won the Pac-12 team title with a 198.000. California was third with a 197.325, and Stanford finished fourth with a 197.175. The Bruins started the meet with a strong 49.475 on balance beam and then grabbed a three-tenths of a point lead at the halfway mark thanks to a 49.625 on floor. Harris' 9.975 led the Bruins on vault, but their 49.375 was dwarfed by Utah's 49.700 on floor that moved the Utes ahead by .025. In the final rotation, UCLA finished up on uneven bars, while Utah ended on vault. The Bruins scored 49.400, with Harris scoring 9.950, Katelyn Rosen contributing a 9.900 and Margzetta Frazier adding a 9.875, but it was not enough to catch Utah, who closed with a 49.500 on vault, thanks to four scores of 9.900 or higher.
HISTORIC PERFORMANCE BY HARRIS
Sophomore Selena Harris had a historic performance against Clemson on March 16, posting the second-highest all-around total in school history with a 39.900. She started the meet by scoring perfect 10s on vault and bars, her third of the season on vault, and her first-ever perfect mark on bars. She also added 9.95s on beam and floor to help UCLA record a team total of 198.550, the third-highest team score in school history. Harris received a total of five 10.0 scores out of a possible eight from the judges, as she also earned a 10 from one of the two judges on floor. She now has five perfect 10s in under two years to rank No. 10 all-time at UCLA for most career 10s. Her performance led her to be chosen the Pac-12 Gymnast of the Week for the third time this season, and she was also named UCLA's Student-Athlete of the Week.
KATE THE GREAT
Katelyn Rosen is proving to be one of the top freshmen in the nation this season, averaging 39.417 in the all-around, with a high of 39.525 set Feb. 25 against Cal. Rosen has competed in the all-around in six meets and on at least two events in every meet. She has posted season-highs of 9.95 on beam and floor, 9.925 on bars and 9.9 on vault and has season averages of 9.8 or higher on all four events. The three-time Pac-12 Freshman/Newcomer of the Week winner has hit all 37 routines this season and scored 9.8 or higher on 33 of her 37 routines, including 14 in a row.
LEE-DOFF LOVE
Junior Emily Lee has mastered the leadoff position on beam since 2023 and has become just as solid as the leadoff on other events this year as well. On beam, she averages 9.877 as the first gymnast up and has scored 9.9 or higher seven times this year, including a career-high-tying 9.95 Feb. 25 vs. Cal and 9.925s in her last two meets. On vault, she averages 9.844 and picked up her first-ever vault victory with a 9.9 against Cal on the first routine of the meet. She has stuck her Yurchenko full five times this year. Lee was the leadoff on floor in four meets and scored a career-high-tying 9.9 against Cal, her third 9.9+ score of the meet.
CAMPBELL SCORES THIRD CAREER 10
Senior Chae Campbell returned to the floor lineup on March 16 against Clemson, marking her first appearance on the event since Jan. 27. In her return, she scored her third career perfect 10 and UCLA's first floor 10 of the year. It was her first 10 since March of 2022. She has competed on floor just six times this year but has three victories in those six meets. Campbell, who also scored a leadoff 9.900 on bars at the Clemson meet, was named Inside Gymnastics' Gymnast of the Week for Week 11. The senior from Carrollton, Texas has been strong on vault as well, earning first-team All-Pac-12 honors and ranking 21st in the nation with a NQS of 9.910. She has scored a perfect 9.95 twice this year and seven times in her career. She ranks second on the team in event victories with seven - three each on vault and floor and one on bars. This season, she has posted career-high marks on all four events with a 10.0 on floor, 9.95s on vault and bars and a 9.925 on beam.
MALABUYO BOOMING
Junior Emma Malabuyo has been outstanding for the Bruin on beam this season, averaging a team-high 9.911 and earning second-team regular season All-America honors. Malabuyo has competed in nine of the Bruins' 12 meets, missing three while competing on the World Cup circuit. She has six scores of 9.900 or higher, including three at 9.950 or higher. She tied for second place at the Pac-12 Championships with a 9.950. Malabuyo has also competed on bars eight times, with a career-high of 9.900 set at Denver on Jan. 21, and on floor in six meets, with a high of 9.925 on Feb. 4.
FRAZIER RETURNS TO FLOOR
Sixth-year senior Margzetta Frazier is back in the floor exercise lineup and back to scoring 9.9s on that event. She returned to floor on Senior Day March 16 and had a fairy tale final home meet, scoring personal bests of 9.975 on floor exercise and 9.950 on uneven bars. Frazier had been limited to strictly uneven bars all season due to an ankle injury before competing on floor in meet 11. She competed again at the Pac-12 Championships and scored 9.900. Frazier has hit 144 of 145 routines without a fall in her collegiate career, including an incredible streak of 133 consecutive hit routines from 2019 through 2024.
REED ALL ABOUT IT
Graduate transfer and six-time All-American Nya Reed has made a seamless transition into the Bruin program, competing on vault and floor in 11 meets this season and ranking No. 23 in the nation on floor. A first-team All-Pac-12 honoree on floor, she captured the Pac-12 Specialist of the Week award on Feb. 6 after her winning performances against Arizona, when she scored 9.95 on vault and 9.975 on floor. She averages 9.923 on floor and leads the team with nine scores of 9.9 or higher on the event. Reed, whose floor routine went viral earlier in the season, has three floor victories, including two in the last four meets, and has scored 9.9 or higher in all but one meet.
GIMME MOORS
Junior Brooklyn Moors has been one of the Bruins' most spectacular performers on floor exercise, earning honorable mention All-Pac-12 honors and scoring 9.900 or better in seven meets, with four scores of 9.950. She tied for second place at the Pac-12 Championships with a 9.950 and has two event victories on the year, winning floor at Oregon State and against Washington. The 2020 Canadian Olympian has competed on floor in 11 meets and averages 9.873.
ANDRES ON FIRE IN FIFTH YEAR
After seeing very limited action the last two seasons due to injuries, graduate student Emma Andres is having her most successful season in her fifth year. She has competed on floor in six of UCLA's last seven meets and is averaging 9.864, with two scores of 9.925, most recently Feb. 25 against Cal. She has competed on beam in all but the season's first meet and has scored a high of 9.900 twice - on her first-ever competitive beam routine at the Sprouts Collegiate Quad on Jan. 13 and March 9 at Arizona State. She has four other scores above 9.800.
FRESHMEN BREAK OUT
The freshman class of Katelyn Rosen, Alex Irvine and Paige Anastasi broke through in a big way in March. Rosen finished fourth in the all-around at the Pac-12 Championships with a career-best all-around score of 39.550. On March 9 at Arizona State, she captured her first two event victories of her career with a 39.450 in the all-around and 9.900 on vault and was subsequently awarded the Pac-12 Freshman of the Week for the third time this season. Against Clemson on March 16, she scored a career-high 9.950 on beam. Irvine had a career meet at Arizona State, hitting personal-bests on both events on which she competed. She captured first place on uneven bars with a 9.900, tied for fifth on vault with a 9.850 and also performed on beam for the first time in her collegiate career, hitting a 9.825 exhibition routine. Anastasi has been on a roll her last three meets. After scoring a career-high on vault at Arizona State with a leadoff stuck Yurchenko full, she upgraded her vault to a Yurchenko 1.5 against Clemson and stuck the vault for a career-best 9.925 to place third. She hit the 1.5 once again at the Pac-12 Championships, scoring 9.900 for the Bruins' second-best score.
HARRIS JOINS ELITE COMPANY
Sophomore Selena Harris became just the third Bruin ever to total three or more 9.95s in a meet in three consecutive competitions when she did so against Arizona on Feb. 4, Oregon State on Feb. 9 and Utah on Feb. 19. The only other Bruins to ever record three or more were Jordan Chiles (2023) and Mohini Bhardwaj (2001). Harris already has the second-most meets with three or more 9.95s, with six, including five this year. Jeanette Antolin holds the UCLA record with seven.
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