The Bruins closed in 17-under 271 on Wednesday in Wolcott, Colo., to finish off a wire-to-wire 33-shot triumph at the 18-team Golfweek Conference Challenge. UCLA posted a 32-under 832 for the week, breaking the tournament scoring record by 26 shots.
The team led by nine after the opening round, enhanced the cushion to 13 with 18 to play and exploded in the final round to that 33-shot margin over Pepperdine (1-over 865).
The Waves have now finished second in consecutive starts this fall.
UCLA’s Mariel Galdiano went out in 7-under 29 in the final round at Red Sky Golf Club’s Fazio Course and finished with a 7-under 65 for a 13-under total and a two-shot win in the individual race.Today in College Golf: @UCLAWomensGolf went very low at #RedSkyGolfClub.
— Lance Ringler (@GolfweekRingler) September 27, 2018
The Bruins 32-under 832 is the T5th lowest 54 hole score & 17-under 271 18-hole round is T4th in NCAA D1 women’s golf history. pic.twitter.com/HwpXpJUHay
“All my parts of my game were working pretty well,” said Galdiano, a junior. “Overall my mental game was a lot stronger than usual today. I knew I was making a lot of birdies and a lot of opportunities were out there, but I just tried to stay grounded.”
The Bruins began the 2018-19 season at the loaded ANNIKA Intercollegiate and battled for the title before finishing runner-up – two shots shy of winner Alabama.
Related: Bama charges to Annika title; UCLA's Tavatanakit top player
Related: WGCA releases women's college preseason rankings; UCLA No. 1
But it was a strong 26-under performance that included an individual title from Patty Tavatanakit after seven straight birdies and a closing eagle on the back nine brought home a final-nine 28.
Tavatanakit didn’t miss a beat in Colorado, as the sophomore was 6 under in one five-hole stretch Wednesday and finished in second at 11 under thanks to a final-round 67.
Two other Bruins placed in the top 10 after Lilia Vu (T-5, 4 under) also closed in 67 and Clare Legaspi (T-7, 3 under) opened in 68 and remained steady over the final 36 holes.
So far, the Bruins have all the looks of a squad that will be right back in national title contention this spring.
But UCLA isn’t getting complacent.
“I’m so proud of our team,” Galdiano said. “Last week … we were 26 under. This week we were 31. So it just goes to show how we can keep getting better and better with every tournament.”

