Early years (1919–1948) In 1919,
Fred Cozens became the first head coach of the UCLA basketball and football teams. Cozens coached the basketball team for two seasons, finishing with an overall record of 21–4.
Caddy Works was the head coach of the Bruins from 1921 to 1939, guiding them to a 173–159 record. Works was a lawyer by profession and coached the team only during the evenings. According to UCLA player and future Olympian
Frank Lubin, Works was "more of an honorary coach" with little basketball knowledge.
Dick Linthicum was UCLA's first
All-American in any sport, earning selections in
1931 and
1932.
Wilbur Johns was the UCLA basketball head coach from 1939 to 1948, guiding the Bruins to a 93–120 record.
John Wooden era (1948–1975) coached UCLA to 10 national championships. From 1948 to 1975,
John Wooden, nicknamed the "Wizard of
Westwood", served as UCLA's head coach. He won ten
NCAA national championships in a 12-year period, including a run of seven in a row that shattered the previous record of only two consecutive titles; to this day, no other team has won more than two straight titles. Within this period, his teams won a men's basketball-record 88 consecutive games. Prior to Wooden's arrival, UCLA had only won two conference championships in the previous 18 years. In his first season, Wooden guided a UCLA team that had finished with a 12–13 record the previous year to a 22–7 record—then the most wins in a season in program history—and the
Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) Southern Division championship. In his second season, Wooden led the Bruins to a 24–7 record and the PCC championship. The Bruins would win the division title in each of the next two seasons and the conference title in the latter season. Up to that time, UCLA had won only two division titles since the PCC began divisional play, and it had not won a conference title of any kind since winning the
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in 1927. In 1955–56, Wooden guided the Bruins to their first undefeated PCC conference title and a 17-game winning streak that only came to an end in the 1956 NCAA Tournament at the hands of a
University of San Francisco team that featured
Bill Russell. However, UCLA was unable to maintain this level of performance over the immediate ensuing seasons, finding itself unable to return to the NCAA Tournament as the
Pete Newell-coached
California teams took control of the conference at the end of the decade. Also hampering the fortunes of Wooden's team during that time period was a probation imposed on all UCLA sports in the aftermath of a
scandal involving illegal payments made to players on the school's football team, along with USC, Cal and Stanford, resulting in the dismantling of the PCC conference. ) makes a reverse two hand
dunk. By 1962 the probation was no longer in place and Wooden had returned the Bruins to the top of their conference (now the
Pac-12 Conference). This time, however, they would take the next step, and go on to unleash a run of dominance unparalleled in the history of college sports. A narrow loss due largely to a controversial foul call in the semifinal of the 1962 NCAA Tournament convinced Wooden that his Bruins were ready to contend for national championships. taking a shot The emergence of the Bruins under Wooden vastly increased the program's popularity. Since 1932, the Bruins had played at the
Men's Gym. It normally seated 2,400, but had been limited to 1,500 since 1955 by order of the city fire marshal. This forced games to be moved to
Pan Pacific Auditorium, the
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena and other venues around Los Angeles when larger crowds were expected—an increasing inconvenience since the Bruins' first national title. At Wooden's urging, a much larger on-campus facility was built in time for the 1965–66 season, the nearly 13,000 seat
Pauley Pavilion. Wooden coached his final game in Pauley Pavilion on March 1, 1975, when UCLA trounced
Stanford 93–59. Four weeks later, following a 75–74 overtime victory over
Louisville in the 1975 NCAA Tournament semifinal game, Wooden announced that he would retire at age 64 immediately after the
championship game. His legendary coaching career concluded triumphantly, as his team responded with a win over
Kentucky to claim Wooden's first career coaching victory over the Wildcats and his unprecedented 10th national championship in a twelve-year span. During his tenure with the Bruins, Wooden became known as the "Wizard of
Westwood", although he personally disdained the nickname. He gained lasting fame at UCLA by winning 620 games in 27 seasons and 10 NCAA titles during his last 12 seasons, which included seven in a row from 1967 to 1973. and four perfect 30–0 seasons. becoming the first to be honored as both a player and a coach. Gilbert, a multi-millionaire contractor, was known for forging close financial relationships with UCLA players, supplying them with cars, clothes, stereos, travel, and apartments, as well as allegedly arranging abortions for players' girlfriends. He represented several UCLA stars, including
Lew Alcindor and
Bill Walton, as an agent after they turned pro. A 1981
Los Angeles Times investigation, interviewing 45 people affiliated with the basketball program, revealed the extent of Gilbert's involvement, describing him as "a one-man clearinghouse who has enabled players and their families to receive goods and services usually at big discounts and sometimes free." The
Times investigation found that Gilbert's involvement in the program began in 1967, when UCLA stars Alcindor and
Lucius Allen were considering transferring to Michigan. They approached former UCLA star
Willie Naulls, who introduced them to Gilbert. In his autobiography
Giant Steps, Abdul-Jabbar called Gilbert "that odd combination, a cagey humanitarian with a lot of muscle. Guys would go to him when they were in trouble, and he would find a way to fix it...Sam steered clear of John Wooden, and Mr. Wooden gave him the same wide berth. Both helped the school greatly...once the money thing got worked out, I never gave another thought to leaving UCLA." "The way Sam explained it to me, it was within the rules," Allen said in a 2007 documentary. "But it wasn't." In 1973, freshman center
Richard Washington told
The New York Times the reason he'd chosen UCLA: "I took a dip in Sam Gilbert's pool and it cooled me off and that was the convincer." In 1978,
NCAA field investigator J. Brent Clark testified before a Congressional subcommittee that he had begun investigating Gilbert's activities the year before but was told to back off by a superior at the NCAA, Bill Hunt. "If I had spent a month in Los Angeles, I could have put them [UCLA] on indefinite suspension," Clark said later, but "as long as Wooden was there, the NCAA would never have taken any action." Clark told Congress: "The conclusion I draw is that it is an example of a school that is too big, too powerful, and too well respected by the public, that the timing was not right to proceed against them. Wooden was aware of Gilbert's closeness with his players. In 1972, Wooden said "I personally hardly know Sam Gilbert...I think he's a person who's trying to be helpful in every way that he can. I sometimes feel that in his interest to be helpful it's in direct contrast with what I would like to have him do to be helpful. I think he means very well and, for the most part, he has attached himself to the minority-race players. I really don't want to get involved in saying much about that, to be honest with you." Despite concerns about Gilbert, Wooden said he chose not to ask players to cut off contact, telling the
Times in 1981: "There's as much crookedness as you want to find. There was something
Abraham Lincoln said — he'd rather trust and be disappointed than distrust and be miserable all the time. Maybe I trusted too much." Wooden did pass along his concerns to UCLA athletic director
J. D. Morgan, but Morgan did not pursue the matter aggressively, in part because he believed Gilbert was connected to the Mafia. Former UCLA chancellor
Charles E. Young recalled Morgan "saying to me in that deep voice of his, 'Chuck, you don't know about Sam Gilbert. Do you want to end up on a block of concrete at the bottom of the ocean?' J. D.'s view of him was that if you cross Sam, you're likely to be killed, literally."
Gene Bartow, who succeeded Wooden as UCLA coach, felt similarly. In 1991, he wrote a letter to an NCAA official thanking him for suppressing Brent Clark's investigation into Gilbert. "I want to say 'thank you' for possibly saving my life...I believe Sam Gilbert was Mafia-related and was capable of hurting people. I think, had the NCAA come in hard while I was at UCLA, Gilbert and others associated with the program would have felt I had reported them, and I would have been in possible danger...Without question, he put out some front-end money to recruits in a few cases, and I think that could have been proven." In 1981, after Wooden's retirement, an NCAA investigation sanctioned UCLA for its relationship with Gilbert, putting the program on probation for two seasons and ordering the school to disassociate itself from him. Three players at other universities told NCAA investigators that Gilbert had offered them cars to commit to UCLA.
Post-Wooden era (1975–1988) From 1975 to 1977,
Gene Bartow served as the head coach of
UCLA. He guided them to a 52–9 record, including a berth in the 1976
Final Four. He coached the 1977 College Player of the Year,
Marques Johnson.
Gary Cunningham became the head coach at UCLA in 1977. He coached two seasons, winning the Pacific-8 and Pacific-10 conference championships and leading UCLA to a #2 ranking in the final polls both seasons.
Larry Brown then moved on to coach UCLA from 1979 to 1981, leading his freshman-dominated 1979–80 team to the NCAA title game before falling to
Louisville, 59–54. However, that runner-up finish was later vacated by the NCAA after two players were found to be ineligible. This was one of the few times a Final Four squad had its record vacated (Villanova had its runner-up finish vacated in 1971 because
Howard Porter had signed a pro contract).
Larry Farmer was the head coach of UCLA from 1981 to 1984, guiding them to a 61–23 () record. He had recruited
Earvin "Magic" Johnson to come play at UCLA, but then told Johnson (was drafted into the NBA in 1979) to hold off on a visit as he was more interested in
Albert King. Farmer signed neither King nor Johnson, and neither recruit played for UCLA. In 1984,
Walt Hazzard was named the UCLA basketball coach 20 years after he was an All-America when UCLA won its first national championship. He coached for four seasons, winning 77 out of 125 games. The 1984–1985 UCLA Bruin basketball team won the
NIT championship. The 1986–1987 UCLA Bruin basketball team won both the
Pac-10 regular season championship as well as the inaugural
Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball tournament.
Jim Harrick era (1988–1996) In 1988,
Jim Harrick returned to UCLA (he had spent two years as an assistant coach from 1978 to 1979) to assume head coaching duties after the firing of
Walt Hazzard. During the recruiting period before his first season, he recruited
Don MacLean, the most significant recruit to commit to UCLA in several years. McLean's arrival helped start a revival of the basketball program. Within four years, the Bruins were in the Elite Eight--"officially" their deepest advance in the tournament in 13 years, and only the second time they had gone that far since Wooden's departure. During the
1994–1995 season, he led UCLA to a 32–1 record (a loss to California was subsequently forfeited to the Bruins) and the school's
eleventh national championship, its first since the
1974–75 season. The 31 actual wins would stand as a school record until the 2005–06 season. In 1996, Harrick's Bruins were upset in the first round by
Princeton. Shortly before the 1997 season, UCLA fired Harrick for lying about who attended a recruiting dinner. At the time, Harrick was the second-winningest coach in school history and the only coach to achieve a National Championship at UCLA post John Wooden to date.
Steve Lavin era (1996–2003) After the sacking of Harrick and with the departure of assistants
Mark Gottfried and
Lorenzo Romar for head coaching jobs shortly after the 1995 NCAA Championship season,
Steve Lavin, as the assistant with the longest tenure at UCLA, was selected as interim head coach. Later that season on February 11, 1997, with the Bruins tied for first place in the Pac-10 with an 8–3 record, UCLA removed the "interim" tag from Lavin's title and formally named him as its 11th head coach. The Bruins then won their next 11 games en route to the Pac-10 title, before being eliminated by the
Minnesota Gophers in the NCAA Midwest Regional Final. In seven seasons as head coach Lavin's record was 12–4 in games involving overtime. Additionally Lavin's Bruins had a 10–4 record against the rival
USC Trojans. During the period 1997–2002, Lavin's Bruins compiled nine consecutive overtime victories. These included victories over
Arizona,
Cincinnati (2002 NCAA second round double overtime victory over No. 1 West Region seed),
Kentucky, and
Stanford (then ranked No 1). The Stanford win was sealed by a last second jumper by star sophomore guard
JaRon Rush. At UCLA from 1996 to 2003, Lavin compiled a record of 145–78. As both an assistant and head coach, Lavin participated in 13 consecutive NCAA tournament appearances (1990–2002), while working at Purdue and UCLA. During Lavin's tenure as a head coach, he was one of only two coaches in the country to lead his team to five NCAA "Sweet 16s" in six years (1997, 1998, 2000–2002), the other coach being
Duke's Mike Krzyzewski. Lavin guided UCLA to six consecutive seasons of 20 or more wins, as well as six consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. Lavin signed seven McDonald's High School All-Americans. Seven of Lavin's former Bruin recruits became roster members of NBA teams:
Trevor Ariza,
Matt Barnes,
Baron Davis,
Dan Gadzuric,
Ryan Hollins,
Jason Kapono, and
Earl Watson. During Lavin's tenure as head coach, the Bruins qualified for six consecutive NCAA Tournaments (1997–2002). Lavin's record in the first and second rounds of the NCAA tournament is 10–1. His winning percentage (90.9%) in the first two rounds is second only to Dean Smith in NCAA Tournament history. However, Lavin also coached the Bruins to their only loss in an NCAA tournament game played in the State of California (a 2002 loss to Missouri in San Jose). In seven seasons as head coach Lavin's record was 12–4 in games involving overtime. The Bruins defeated the No. 1 team in the country in four consecutive collegiate seasons: Stanford in 2000 and 2001, Kansas in 2002 and Arizona in 2003. In March 2003, following UCLA's first losing season (10–19) in 55 years, Lavin was fired. Despite some success under the watch of Steve Lavin, the program wanted to regain its position in the college basketball upper echelon. Even the success in the NCAA tournament belied the fact that UCLA had earned no better than a number 4 seed with the exception of the 1997 season. The
2002–03 season turned out to be the back-breaker for Lavin as the Bruins stumbled to a 10–19 record and a 6–12 record in the conference. It was the first losing season for UCLA in over five decades. Lavin was dismissed following the season.
Ben Howland era (2003–2013) (left) and
Kevin Love defend against
USC UCLA looked to find a coach that could move the Bruins back to the elite ranks of the Pac-10 and the country.
Ben Howland's success at the University of Pittsburgh and his southern California roots made him an attractive candidate. In 2003, he left Pitt and accepted the head coaching duties at UCLA. Howland remedied this disappointment in his recruiting efforts. Howland produced a top tier recruiting class from athletes in southern California that fit his Big East style. Behind Lavin hold-over Dijon Thompson and Howland recruits
Jordan Farmar and
Arron Afflalo, UCLA produced a winning season for the first time in three years and returned to the tournament, where they lost in the first round. Starting the
2005–06 season with the majority of the roster made over in Howland's image and with the Lavin hold-overs (e.g.,
Ryan Hollins and
Cedric Bozeman), the Bruins produced an excellent campaign. They finished the regular season 24–6, winning the Pac-10 Conference title. They then roared through the
Pac-10 tournament, winning each game by double digits en route to only the second Pac-10 tournament championship in school history. The momentum continued into the NCAA tournament as the second-seeded Bruins defeated
Gonzaga in the Sweet Sixteen. They then upset top-seeded Memphis to reach the school's first Final Four in 11 years. The run ended in the championship game against
Florida, whose imposing front-line proved to be a matchup problem for the Bruins. Howland continued his success at UCLA the following year. The
Bruins finished undefeated at home for the first time in 22 years, winning the Pac-10 conference title. However they lost in their first
Pac-10 tournament game and were seeded second in the NCAA Tournament West Region. After a close second-round win over
Indiana, Howland led the Bruins to a win over his former team,
Pitt in the Sweet Sixteen. The Bruins then again upset the top seed in the West Region,
Kansas, and reached the second of UCLA's first consecutive Final Fours since the
John Wooden era, only to lose again to
Florida in the national semifinal. At the start of the
2007–08 season, expectations for
UCLA were the highest ever with the arrival of
Kevin Love, one of the best low-post prospects in the high school class of 2007. Combined with the emergence of
Russell Westbrook and
Darren Collison in the back-court, the Bruins won their 3rd consecutive Pac-10 conference title, and their second
Pac-10 tournament title in three years. They received their first No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament since 1995, and once again reached the Final Four, where they faced another top seed, the
Memphis Tigers. Memphis got the better of the Bruins, who returned to Westwood without a championship once again. However, the Bruins program under Howland began to struggle in subsequent seasons. After 2008, UCLA did not advance past the first weekend of the NCAA tourney, and did not qualify for the tournament in
2010 and
2012. With a 77–73 victory over
Penn on December 10, 2011; Howland passed
Jim Harrick for second on UCLA's all-time wins list behind
John Wooden. Nonetheless, questions about how Howland was running the program began to come into focus. In February 2012, a
Sports Illustrated article portrayed UCLA player
Reeves Nelson as a bully on and off the court, who at times intentionally tried to injure his teammates. According to the article, Howland looked the other way and did not discipline Nelson for over two years. From 2008—the Bruins' last Final Four appearance—through 2012, at least 11 players left the UCLA program. Although the 2012–2013 Bruins won the Pac-12 regular season championship, they quickly bowed out in the first round of the NCAA tournament. On March 25, 2013, three days after being eliminated by 11th seed Minnesota, UCLA fired Howland.
Steve Alford era (2013–2019) On March 30, 2013,
Steve Alford signed a seven-year, $18.2-million contract to become the head coach of UCLA, replacing the fired Ben Howland. In his first year as head coach Alford led UCLA to a Pac-12 tournament championship, a feat not accomplished since 2008. The team later went on to the Sweet Sixteen of the
NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament as a 4 seed in the South regional before losing to the 1 seed Florida. In his second year, the team was controversially chosen to participate in the
2015 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament as an 11 seed in the South Region, where they upset the 6 seed
SMU on a game-winning goaltending call. The Bruins went on to defeat the
University of Alabama at Birmingham Blazers before losing to
Gonzaga in the Sweet Sixteen. After a disappointing third season in which UCLA suffered their fourth losing record since 1948, the team rebounded in the following season, going 31–5 before falling to
Kentucky, again in the Sweet Sixteen, considered an underachievement given the talent level and overall record of the team. Freshman point guard
Lonzo Ball, as well as the program in general, garnered national media attention for the outspoken behavior of his father
LaVar Ball. Prior to the beginning of the
2017–18 season, the team travelled to China to participate in the annual Pac-12 China Game. On November 6 in
Hangzhou, during a block of free time allotted to the players, freshmen
LiAngelo Ball,
Cody Riley and Jalen Hill shoplifted sunglasses from a
Louis Vuitton department store. They were placed under house arrest by local police the next day and required to hand over their passports. The controversy garnered immense attention due to the reputation of LiAngelo as a member of the
Ball family and received significant media coverage. President
Donald Trump, who was concurrently visiting China, reportedly asked General Secretary
Xi Jinping to pardon the three men, and they were released back to the United States shortly after, although Ball's family questioned if the President's request was a direct reason for the release. Xi himself later reportedly denied that Trump had asked him about pardoning the UCLA players and that the General Secretary had nothing to do with their release. The players were placed on suspension from basketball activities, and were eventually suspended for the entirety of the season on December 22. LaVar Ball maintained that his son had not deserved suspension; LiAngelo Ball withdrew from UCLA and signed with a
sports agent, making him ineligible for further NCAA competition. UCLA finished the regular season in a three-way tie for third (tied with Utah and Stanford) in the Pac-12 (21–10, 11–7), disappointingly falling to St. Bonaventure in the NCAA First Four Play-in Round. Junior guard
Aaron Holiday was named to the First-team
All-Pac-12 and the Pac-12 All Defensive Team, the first player to do so in the Alford era. Holiday was drafted 23 by the Indiana Pacers in the First Round of the 2018 NBA Draft. UCLA started the
2018–19 season ranked No. 21 in the AP Poll and won seven of its first nine games. However, they concluded non-conference play with four consecutive losses, including back-to-back home losses to
mid-major teams
Belmont and
Liberty. The 73–58 loss to Liberty on December 29 was UCLA's most lopsided home loss in Alford's tenure. Two days after that loss, UCLA announced that Alford had been
fired and that assistant coach
Murry Bartow would serve as interim head coach for the remainder of the season. They failed to qualify for the NCAA Tournament, and ended the decade without a Final Four appearance for the first time since the 1950s.
Mick Cronin era (2019–present) On April 9, 2019, UCLA announced the hiring of
Mick Cronin as the program's 14th head coach. He was named
Pac-12 Coach of the Year in his first season in
2019–20. However, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the Pac-12 Tournament and NCAA Tournament were cancelled. The following season in
2020–21, the Bruins opened the NCAA Tournament in the First Four, advancing to the Final Four after defeating No. 1 seed
Michigan. No. 11 seed UCLA became the second First Four team to reach the Final Four, the school's first national semifinal since
2008, which had also been their last trip to the Elite Eight. In
2022–23, the Bruins received a No. 2 seed in the
2023 NCAA tournament, their highest seeding since they were placed No. 1 in
2008. They advanced to the Sweet Sixteen for the third straight season, but losing two starters due to injuries, they were eliminated from the tournament for the second time in three years by Gonzaga. ==Season-by-season results==