Los Angeles Times

CLOSE TO THE HEART

UCLA coach says communicat­ion was key in summer of social unrest

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

The conversati­ons were painful. That’s why Cori Close needed to have them.

While wrestling with her role as a white authority figure in a predominan­tly Black sport, the UCLA women’s basketball coach spoke with her players amid a summer of social unrest to examine the privilege she’d been blind to and her responsibi­lity in the future. Seeing the pain in her players’ eyes changed her, Close said.

Online classes soon started for the players. The conversati­ons became less frequent. Close messaged her players. She wanted to hear more.

“She really has a f ire to want to learn,” senior forward Lauryn Miller said. “She wants us to grow in our ability to be leaders, but she also wants herself to grow.”

This season, played amid a pandemic, has required that constant growth mindset. For Close, evolving COVID- 19 protocols and the country’s racial reckoning have made this her “hardest year of leadership. It’s also one of the most significan­t as she passed the 200- win mark on Dec. 6 with a victory against Arizona State.

Close is the third coach in program history to reach the milestone, and with a 203- 105 ( 65.9%) record, she has the best winning percentage of the three, besting Billie Moore ( 296- 181, 62.12%) and Close’s former boss, Kathy

Olivier ( 232- 208, 52.7%).

UCLA, ranked 11th in the nation with a 5- 1 record, plays No. 1 Stanford ( 6- 0) at noon Monday at Pauley Pavilion.

The congratula­tory messages that f looded Close’s phone and inbox after the win against Arizona State were overwhelmi­ng, not because they commemorat­ed numerous wins, but they reminded Close of the people she had met through the game. Those are what matter.

“It isn’t about the 200 wins,” Close said. “It’s really about 200 hearts.”

During 15 years of speaking to legendary UCLA coach John Wooden and visiting his home on Tuesdays, Close aligned her priorities as a coach. She asked him questions that seemed complicate­d, wondering what he would do in a particular situation. He returned simple answers.

“You’ll do the right thing as long as you’re coaching people’s hearts f irst,” Close said of Wooden’s message. When she took over at UCLA in 2011, Close, an 18- year assistant who often dreamed of taking a top position somewhere, kept Wooden’s mantra in mind. The mission, now in its 10th year and repeated countless times by Close and her assistants, is to be “an elite program that equips, mentors and teaches young women for life beyond UCLA.”

Miller, the Gatorade Missouri player of the year as a senior at Kirkwood High, was drawn to Close’s focus on building better people before building better basketball players. During the recruiting process, all coaches assure parents their daughters will be taken care of on campus, but Close’s message felt unique, Miller said. Four years later, she is getting ready to graduate in June with a master’s degree in transforma­tive coaching and leadership.

Continuity on the coaching staff has helped the program remain committed to the mission. Assistant coaches Tony Newnan and Shannon Perry- LeBeauf have been with Close since she took over. Assistant coach Tasha Brown followed three years ago after former assistant Jenny Huth took the head coaching position at Northern Colorado. They also work with director of operations Pam Walker, whose career with the Bruins spans three decades. Close credits her staff for covering up the mistakes — there are many, Close assures — she made as first- time head coach.

Close is a humble leader, said Perry- LeBeauf, the associate head coach. She is never too proud to ask for help or accept advice. She recognizes her weaknesses and hires to them. She is a good delegator, although this year has tested her resolve in that aspect. “There are just so many decisions that had to be made that she couldn’t [ delegate],” PerryLeBea­uf said. “To watch her take it on and to have such care and to be sensitive to the needs of our players, but also holding a standard to what we want to do and what we want to accomplish, that’s a really delicate blend. … Just her attention to detail has been amazing in this and I sometimes look at her, like I don’t know how you do it.”

Between practices, virtual recruiting and games, Close is also on the NCAA Division I women’s basketball oversight committee and part of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Assn. To balance it all, Close encourages everyone on the staff to take one day off a week to recharge. No work at all. For the head coach, it often means house projects, hiking and reading. It’s a respite during a year when everything has been intense, Close said. No one was sure whether they could even play this season. Then there were conversati­ons about budget cuts amid the pandemic.

The conversati­ons of racial justice especially left Close’s emotions raw and fried. She felt exhausted, then guilty for feeling that way when Black people had struggled for centuries. She also feels grateful.

“It’s deepened all of our relationsh­ips,” Close said. “When you have to wrestle and you gotta even learn to ask for forgivenes­s and you gotta work through conflict, you actually end up coming out in deeper and more trusting places on the other side.”

With support from the coaching staff, the players formed a committee to advance the program’s social justice initiative­s. “More than a D. R. E. A. M,” which stands for diversify, reveal, educate, advocate and motivate, spearheade­d the team’s powerful “Black women matter” video posted on social media in response to the grand jury decision to not indict the officers involved in Breonna Taylor’s death. All players, coaches and support staff appeared in the video, standing together on UCLA’s campus. Miller’s friends and family were amazed at the content the players are allowed to share. It’s because the coaches trust them, she said.

“I honestly think when it comes to a white coach and this time, Coach Cori is absolutely the standard,” Miller said. “If it comes down to coaches not being sure what to do, how to navigate, what using your platform looks like, honestly Coach Cori is who you need to be looking at.”

Inspired by former Dallas Wings head coach Brian Agler’s effort to highlight Black- owned restaurant­s during the WNBA season, Close celebrates Blackowned small businesses every game day, posting new companies on her social media channels. She has highlighte­d UCLA alumni such as Baron Davis and his company Black Santa; Nina Westbrook and her children’s clothing line; and Isaac Hamilton and Kelli Hayes, who founded a cookie company.

With help from the players, the Bruins are trying to shift their outreach efforts toward the Black community, donating shoes and clothes and speaking to kids in underserve­d areas.

Connecting with the community has always been a pillar of the program under Close. It is another lesson she learned from Wooden, who said a program must not only be good for the players, but for “the bankers and the bakers” who surround them. Even when gatherings aren’t allowed and the team must stay isolated to keep its season going amid the pandemic, the Bruins stay engaged by participat­ing in Zoom meetings with donors. None of it seems to connect with basketball, but it still adds up to wins.

“A lot of coaches think it’s one or the other: I have to really cater to the person, or I need to be producing winners and champions,” Miller said. “It’s been an incredible experience to play for Coach Cori and know that she believes and is showing that you can do both.”

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? UCLA coach Cori Close recalled lessons she learned from John Wooden to help navigate challenges.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times UCLA coach Cori Close recalled lessons she learned from John Wooden to help navigate challenges.

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