Cori Rashel Close (born July 29, 1971)[1] is an American basketball coach who is the head coach for the UCLA Bruins women's team.[2] She played college basketball as a guard for the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos from 1989 to 1993, serving as a team captain during her final two seasons and helping them reach consecutive NCAA tournament appearances.[3] Following the end of her playing career, Close served as an assistant coach with UCLA from 1993 to 1995, UC Santa Barbara from 1995 to 2004, and the Florida State Seminoles from 2004 to 2011 before being named UCLA's head coach in 2011. Close won the 2026 basketball championship with the Bruins. The Bruins went 37–1 and won the program's first basketball championship in the NCAA era.[4]
College career UCSB 1989-93
Close played four years on the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos women's basketball team.[5] As of the 2025-26 season, she was listed in the career top ten in assists and steals for the Gauchos.[5] She was the Big West conference tournament player of the game in 1993.[5] Her teams advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament in 1992 and 1993.
Close was assistant on the Bruin coaching staff in for the 1993-94 and 1994-95 seasons, where she established a mentorship relationship with coach emeritus John Wooden.[11][12] Close said that the bond started because she shared the same first name spelling as Wooden's great-granddaughter.[13]
UC Santa Barbara
Cori became an assistant coach at her alma mater in 1995.[14]
Florida State
In May 2004, Close became associate head coach at Florida State under head coach Sue Semrau.[15] The Seminoles made the NCAA Tournament in each of Close’s seven seasons on the staff in Tallahassee, including the program’s first appearances in the Sweet Sixteen (2007) and Elite Eight (2010).
On April 21, 2011, Close was named head coach at UCLA.[16] She led the Bruins to their first Final Four of the NCAA tournament in 2025, after taking them to the Sweet Sixteen six times, advancing to the regional final once in 2018.[17]
Close explained the superstition around her wearing leather pants on gameday was started by strength coach Ash Samaniego in Paris, France, before the 2024-25 season opener.[19] Close said she is undefeated when wearing the pants since the Bruins beat Louisville in that 2024 game. She did not wear the pants in the 2026 NCAA semifinal against Texas.[19] Although not superstitious herself, she stated in the pregame interview that enough people commented that she felt she needed to wear them for the 2026 National Championship game.[19]
National championPostseason invitational champion Conference regular season championConference regular season and conference tournament champion
Division regular season champion
Division regular season and conference tournament champion
Conference tournament champion
Awards and honors
March 23, 2016 – Close was named the 2016 United States Marine Corps/WBCA NCAA Division I Region 5 Coach of the Year
March 6, 2019 – Close was named the Pac-12 Coach of the Year by Pac-12 women's basketball media members[20]
↑Considine, Madeline -Bruins' Cori Close Earns Another National Coaching Honor. Sports Illustrated, April 3, 2025,
In the midst of a record-breaking season and UCLA’s first NCAA Final Four appearance, Coach Cori Close has been honored as the 2025 Werner Ladder Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year.