UCLA’s Cori Close says Bruins’ success has taken a toll on her
SACRAMENTOΒ βΒ Cori Closeβs candid remarks about the growing challenges of coaching in modern college athletics sparked a reaction nationwide among her peers.
On Thursday, the UCLA womenβs basketball coach was asked about the rapid changes shaping college sports ahead of her Bruinsβ Sweet 16 matchup against Minnesota on Friday night. The No. 1-seeded Bruins (33-1) entered the Sweet 16 round considered a strong Final Four contender, powered by one of the deepest starting lineups in the nation.
βIβve never been as tired as Iβve been in the last two years, and itβs made me think how much longer I can do this,β Close said. βAnd Iβm just being transparent with you about that. There are so many things that are harder, and we keep losing incredible people on the menβs and the womenβs side.β
UCLA has dominated throughout the season, entering the Sweet 16 on a 27-game winning streak that dates to late November. Three starters β Lauren Betts, Charlisse Leger-Walker and Gianna Kneepkens β began their college careers elsewhere before transferring into the program.
βHow do we now figure out this transfer portal? Letβs not complain about it,β Close said. βLetβs have solutions about whatβs right and what adjustments need to be made. β¦ Iβm a huge advocate for NIL. It should have happened 20 years ago. And we need boundaries. We need infrastructure. We need competitive equity. We need transparency.β
In contrast, Louisville coach Jeff Walz offered a more critical perspective when addressing the same topic during a NCAA news conference in Fort Worth, Texas.
UCLA guard Kiki Rice points across the court while talking with Bruins coach Cori Close during an NCAA tournament win over California Baptist at Pauley Pavilion on March 21.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
βIβm friends with Cori,β Walz said. βMy favorite line, I would tell her, if you donβt like your job, find a new job. I mean, Iβm listening this morning at 4:20 as the workers outside my window at the hotel in the street are working. I mean, you choose your profession. If you donβt like it, find a new profession.β
No. 3-seeded Louisville will face No. 2 Michigan on Saturday after falling short against Duke in the ACC championship game.
Close, who has spent 33 years in coaching, including 15 at UCLA, has navigated an evolving landscape shaped by name, image and likeness compensation policies and the transfer portal, just like everyone else. Last season, she earned national coach of the year and led the Bruins to the programβs first Final Four. UCLA has now reached at least the Sweet 16 during four consecutive seasons and eight times during Closeβs tenure in Westwood.
This year, the Bruins swept through Big Ten play undefeated and once again secured a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.
βI mean, of course, itβs a lot of work, but we chose to do it and we get compensated for it,β Walz said. βI donβt think anybody is going to feel too sorry for us that you might be tired. Iβm tired, too, but who is not?β
Several longtime coaches have stepped away from the game in recent years, amid, though not always directly attributed to, the sportβs ongoing transformation. Hall of Fame Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer retired in 2025, while Georgia Techβs Nell Fortner, Iowaβs Lisa Bluder and Harvardβs Kathy Delaney-Smith stepped down during the past three seasons.
βItβs ever-changing, and thatβs the frustrating part, because you can never get a grasp on any of it,β Kentucky coach Kenny Brooks said. βYou think that you have it. Then all of a sudden, itβs like somebody pulls a rug out and says, βNo, weβre changing it,β and now itβs going to be this way now. We want to get out ahead of everything, but we canβt. We always seem like weβre one step behind because there are so many changes.β
Ultimately, Closeβs message centered on the need for structural support in a rapidly shifting environment.
βIf thereβs one thing I would ask of our governing bodies and the NCAA and our administrations is please develop infrastructure and boundaries that create an opportunity to have sustained excellence and sustainable pace,β she said. βOtherwise, we are going to continue to lose some of our best coaches, and I do not think our game can afford to do that.β