Saturday, May 9, 2026

Daily Bruin Logo
FacebookFacebookFacebookFacebookFacebook
AdvertiseDonateSubmit
Expand Search
NewsSportsArtsOpinionThe QuadPhotoVideoIllustrationsCartoonsGraphicsThe StackPRIMEEnterpriseInteractivesPodcastsGamesClassifiedsPrint issues

IN THE NEWS:

2026 USAC elections

UCLA women’s tennis loses super regional match to reigning champion Georgia

Feature image

UCLA women’s tennis huddles on the court at Los Angeles Tennis Center. The Bruins’ season ended in the super regional of the NCAA tournament Friday afternoon. (Leydi Cris Cobo Cordon/Daily Bruin senior staff)

Women’s tennis


UCLA1
No. 1 seed Georgia4
Natalia Mochernak

By Natalia Mochernak

May 8, 2026 5:58 p.m.

Correction: The original version of this article’s info box incorrectly displayed the score as 4-0. In fact, UCLA lost 4-1.

The title of reigning champion has some bite to it.

And the Bulldogs proved that by dashing the Bruins’ dreams of their first national title since 2014.  

UCLA women’s tennis (18-8, 9-4) fell 4-1 to No. 1 seed Georgia (21-5, 12-3) in a little over two hours in the round of 16 of the NCAA tournament Friday afternoon in Athens, Georgia. 

The Bulldogs showed their prowess on their home courts of Dan Magill Tennis Center from the start, reminding the Bruins why they were last year’s winners by claiming the doubles point to open the match.

Though junior Ahmani Guichard and freshman Kayla Chung started off with a 2-0 lead against Bulldog tandem Emma Dong and Anastasiia Gureva, the Bruin pair did not win another game after. 

Chung and Guichard tried creative tactics – volleying and rushing the net throughout baseline points – but Dong and Gureva proved adept in adjusting and helped secure the first win of the day for the Bulldogs.

The rest of UCLA’s duos faced a similar fate. Dong and Gureva – as well as the other Georgia teams – were elected to serve first, which proved to be a major advantage. The Bruins struggled to break the Bulldogs’ serves on all three courts – a trend that later bled into singles. 

Sophomore pair Kate Fakih and Olivia Center fell 6-3 to Anastasiia Lopata and Patricija Paukstyte next at line one.  

Bruins Mayu Crossley and Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer’s doubles match at line two against Deniz Dilek and Aysegul Mert remained unfinished, though Dilek and Mert were up 5-3 and had a match point at 40-15 in the last game. 

The Bulldogs dominance carried into singles play as they won four out of six of the singles’ first sets. Crossley at line two and junior Bianca Fernandez at line four were the only Bruins to pull out first set wins.

At line six, Guichard lost the first set 6-0 to Sofia Rojas, while battling a back injury that forced her to serve underhand. Despite her injury, Guichard almost turned around the second set, forcing Rojas into longer rallies. 

Rojas ended up triumphing in the second set 7-5, earning the Bulldogs their first singles win.

At line three, Fakih went down 0-3 quickly in the first set against Dilek. She was able to come back to make the score 4-4, but struggled breaking Dilek’s powerful serve to finish out the set. Dilek won the second set in similar fashion, 6-3, to widen the Bulldogs lead to 3-0.

Sophomore Kate Fakih winds up a forehand. (Leydi Cris Cobo Cordon/Daily Bruin senior staff)

At line five, Center – who clinched the Bruin’s win against Arizona State in the first round of the tournament –  went back and forth with Georgia’s Dong, even leading in the first set. However, Dong targeted Center’s weaker backhand side, drilling crosscourt forehands to force errors. 

Dong eventually secured Bulldog’s spot in the quarterfinals with a 7-5, 6-2 finish.

Senior Anne-Christine Lutkemeyer reaches down low for a ball. (Chenrui Zhang/Daily Bruin staff)

Lutkemeyer fought through her last collegiate match – though it went unfinished.

The senior lost the first set to Lopata 6-3, struggling with her opponent’s consistency returning every ball. Lopata hit loopier deep balls, forcing Lutkemeyer to hit shorter balls that were easier to attack. 

Lutkemeyer went down 5-3 in the second set after losing two deuce points in a row – including a missed overhead. 

She got her revenge, though, and continued to play the offense, despite the pressure of the sudden death points. She won the next two games on deuce points – including with a decisive overhead winner to make it 5-5. Lutkemeyer led 5-1 in the second set tiebreak when the coaches stopped play.

Fernandez – who will leave college early to join the professional tour – secured the Bruins only win of the day at line four. 

Fernandez’s opponent, Gureva, shifted her playing style multiple times throughout the match, but Fernandez was able to adapt to end her collegiate career triumphantly. 

Georgia will face off next against the winner of Texas and North Carolina State as it contends for its second-straight national title.

Share this story:FacebookTwitterRedditEmail
Natalia Mochernak | Campus politics editor
Mochernak is the 2025-2026 campus politics editor and a Sports contributor. She was previously a News contributor on the metro and features and student life beats. Mochernak is a second-year communication and Spanish language and culture student from San Diego.
Mochernak is the 2025-2026 campus politics editor and a Sports contributor. She was previously a News contributor on the metro and features and student life beats. Mochernak is a second-year communication and Spanish language and culture student from San Diego.
Featured Classifieds
More classifieds »
Related Posts