2001 UCLA Bruins softball team

American college softball season

2001 UCLA Bruins softball
UCLA logo written in blue and gold script
ConferencePacific-10 Conference
Record62–6 (16–5 Pac-10)
Head coach
  • Sue Enquist (13th season)
Home stadiumSunset Field
Seasons
← 2000
2002 →
2001 Pacific-10 Conference softball standings
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Conf Overall
Team W   L   T   PCT W   L   T   PCT
Arizona  ‍‍‍y 19 2 0   .905 65 4 0   .942
UCLA  ‍‍‍y 16 5 0   .762 62 6 0   .912
Stanford  ‍‍‍y 11 10 0   .524 54 16 1   .768
Washington  ‍‍‍y 11 10 0   .524 40 23 0   .635
Oregon State  ‍‍‍y 10 10 0   .500 44 24 1   .645
Arizona State  ‍‍‍y 9 12 0   .429 36 22 0   .621
California  ‍‍‍y 6 14 0   .300 54 18 0   .750
Oregon  ‍‍‍ 1 20 0   .048 28 40 0   .412
† – Conference champion
y – Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of May 31, 2001[1]
Rankings from Coaches' Poll


The 2001 UCLA Bruins softball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2001 NCAA Division I softball season. The Bruins were coached by Sue Enquist, in her thirteenth season as head coach. The Bruins played their home games at Easton Stadium and finished with a record of 62–6. They competed in the Pacific-10 Conference, where they finished second with a 16–5 record.

The Bruins were invited to the 2001 NCAA Division I softball tournament, where they swept the Regional and then completed a run to the title game of the Women's College World Series where they fell to champion Arizona.[2]

Personnel

Roster

2001 UCLA Bruins roster[3]
 

Pitchers

  • 7 - Amanda Freedjunior
  • 23 – Stephanie Swenson – senior
  • 14 – Keira Goerl – freshman
  • 22 – Courtney Dale - Redshirt Senior

Catchers

Infielders

  • 5 – Casey Hiraiwa - Redshirt Junior
  • 10 – Crissy Buck – junior
  • 11 – Monique Mejia – sophomore
  • 20 – Claire Sua – freshman
  • 21 – Tairia Mimssophomore
  • 23 – Toria Auelua – sophomore
  • 27 - Natasha Watleysophomore
 

Outfielders

  • 2 – Erin Rahn – junior
  • 3 – Lupe Brambila – senior
  • 24 – Marcel Torres – freshman
  • 44 – Stephanie Ramos – freshman

Utility

  • 13 – Julie Hoshizaki – freshman
  • 9 – Amanda Simpson – freshman

Coaches

2001 UCLA Bruins softball coaching staff[3]

Schedule

Legend
  UCLA win
  UCLA loss
  Tie
* Non-Conference game
2001 UCLA Bruins Softball Game Log[2]
Regular season
February
Date Opponent Site/stadium Score Overall record Pac-10 record
Feb 3 at San Jose State* SJSU Field • San Jose, CA W 8–05 1–0
Feb 3 Cal State Northridge* Easton StadiumLos Angeles, CA W 13–05 2–0
Feb 3 Cal Poly* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 5–0 3–0
Feb 4 Cal State Northridge* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 7–0 4–0
Feb 4 Cal Poly* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 10–26 5–0
Feb 7 at Cal State Fullerton* Anderson Family FieldFullerton, CA W 6–0 6–0
Feb 7 at Cal State Fullerton* Anderson Family Field • Fullerton, CA W 18–35 7–0
Feb 10 San Diego* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 8–06 8–0
Feb 10 San Diego* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 7–0 9–0
Feb 14 Long Beach State* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 7–0 10–0
Feb 16 vs Portland State* Rebel Softball Diamond • Paradise, NV W 20–05 11–0
Feb 16 vs Kansas* Rebel Softball Diamond • Paradise, NV W 15–15 12–0
Feb 17 vs Wisconsin* Rebel Softball Diamond • Paradise, NV W 9–2 13–0
Feb 17 vs Nebraska* Rebel Softball Diamond • Paradise, NV W 6–2 14–0
Feb 18 vs FIU* Rebel Softball Diamond • Paradise, NV W 10–05 15–0
Feb 23 vs Wisconsin* Red and Charline McCombs FieldAustin, TX W 12–15 16–0
Feb 23 vs Cal State Fullerton* Red and Charline McCombs Field • Austin, TX W 4–0 17–0
Feb 24 at Texas* Red and Charline McCombs Field • Austin, TX W 4–38 18–0
Feb 25 vs Wisconsin* Red and Charline McCombs Field • Austin, TX W 1–0 19–0
Feb 26 at Texas State* Bobcat Softball StadiumSan Marcos, TX W 4–310 20–0
Feb 26 at Texas State* Bobcat Softball Stadium • San Marcos, TX W 3–1 21–0
March
Date Opponent Site/stadium Score Overall record Pac-10 record
Mar 2 Colorado State* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 11–36 22–0
Mar 2 Colorado State* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 2–0 23–0
Mar 3 South Florida* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 10–05 24–0
Mar 3 South Florida* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 5–3 25–0
Mar 4 UNLV* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 3–0 26–0
Mar 6 UC Riverside* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 10–05 27–0
Mar 6 UC Riverside* Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 4–0 28–0
Mar 8 vs Colorado State* Margie Wright DiamondFresno, CA W 8–1 29–0
Mar 9 vs Cal Poly* Margie Wright Diamond • Fresno, CA W 9–16 30–0
Mar 9 vs DePaul* Margie Wright Diamond • Fresno, CA W 4–0 31–0
Mar 10 vs New Mexico State* Margie Wright Diamond • Fresno, CA W 4–0 32–0
Mar 10 vs Oregon State* Margie Wright Diamond • Fresno, CA W 3–2 33–0
Mar 11 at Fresno State* Margie Wright Diamond • Fresno, CA W 8–2 34–0
Mar 14 at UC Santa Barbara* Campus Diamond • Santa Barbara, CA W 6–1 35–0
Mar 30 at Stanford Boyd & Jill Smith Family StadiumStanford, CA L 0–1 35–1 0–1
Mar 31 at California Levine-Fricke FieldBerkeley, CA W 2–19 36–1 1–1
April
Date Opponent Site/stadium Score Overall record Pac-10 record
Apr 1 at California Levine-Fricke Field • Berkeley, CA W 5–1 37–1 2–1
Apr 4 at Cal State Northridge* Northridge, CA W 5–1 38–1
Apr 4 at Cal State Northridge* Northridge, CA W 12–16 39–1
Apr 6 Arizona State Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA L 1–6 39–2 2–2
Apr 7 Arizona Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA L 0–4 39–3 2–3
Apr 8 Arizona Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 3–0 40–3 3–3
Apr 13 Washington Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 5–414 41–3 4–3
Apr 14 Washington Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 4–0 42–3 5–3
Apr 20 at Oregon State OSU Softball ComplexCorvallis, OR L 1–2 42–4 5–4
Apr 21 at Oregon Howe FieldEugene, OR W 4–3 43–4 6–4
Apr 22 at Oregon Howe Field • Eugene, OR W 6–3 44–4 7–4
Apr 25 at UC Riverside* Riverside, CA W 12–05 45–4
Apr 25 at UC Riverside* Riverside, CA W 8–05 46–4
Apr 27 California Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 2–0 47–4 8–4
Apr 28 Stanford Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 8–05 48–4 9–4
Apr 29 Stanford Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 2–0 49–4 10–4
May
Date Opponent Site/stadium Score Overall record Pac-10 record
May 2 at Washington Husky Softball StadiumSeattle, WA W 4–3 50–4 11–4
May 4 Oregon Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 6–4 51–4 12–4
May 5 Oregon State Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 4–0 52–4 13–4
May 6 Oregon State Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 4–1 53–4 14–4
May 11 at Arizona Rita Hillenbrand Memorial StadiumTucson, AZ L 0–4 53–5 14–5
May 12 at Arizona State Alberta B. Farrington Softball StadiumTempe, AZ W 1–0 54–5 15–5
May 12 at Arizona State Alberta B. Farrington Softball Stadium • Tempe, AZ W 8–68 55–5 16–5
Post-season
NCAA Regional No. 2
Date Opponent Site/stadium Score Overall record NCAAT record
May 17 Coastal Carolina Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 8–05 56–5 1–0
May 18 Cal State Northridge Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 9–0 57–5 2–0
May 19 San Diego State Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 3–1 58–5 3–0
May 20 San Diego State Easton Stadium • Los Angeles, CA W 11–05 59–5 4–0
NCAA Women's College World Series
Date Opponent Seed Site/stadium Score Overall record WCWS Record
May 24 (7) Iowa (2) ASA Hall of Fame StadiumOklahoma City, OK W 7–0 60–5 1–0
May 25 (6) Stanford (2) ASA Hall of Fame Stadium • Oklahoma City, OK W 5–0 61–5 2–0
May 27 (3) LSU (2) ASA Hall of Fame Stadium • Oklahoma City, OK W 6–0 62–5 3–0
May 28 (1) Arizona (2) ASA Hall of Fame Stadium • Oklahoma City, OK L 0–1 62–6 3–1

References

  1. ^ 2018 Softball Media Guide. Pac-12 Conference. p. 52. Retrieved May 18, 2020.
  2. ^ a b 2022 Softball Information Guide: Yearly Results (PDF). UCLA Bruins. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  3. ^ a b "2022 Softball Information Guide: Letterwinners" (PDF). UCLA Bruins. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
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National Championships in bold; Women’s College World Series appearances in italics