Barbara Kalbus Invitational Represents First TestBarbara Kalbus Invitational Represents First Test
Women's Water Polo

Barbara Kalbus Invitational Represents First Test

No. 1 Stanford shifts its attention to the Barbara Kalbus Invitational, facing host UC Irvine on Friday

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STANFORD, Calif. - No. 1 Stanford shifts its attention to the Barbara Kalbus Invitational, opening play on Friday, Feb. 13, against host UC Irvine at 12 p.m.

The
Cardinal is a seven-time champion of the Barbara Kalbus Invitational (2025, 2023, 2022, 2018, 2011, 2009, 2007) and has won three of the last four tournaments overall.

Kamryn Barone’s game-high four goals led another balanced scoring attack as No. 1 Stanford routed No. 16 UC Davis 20-3 on Feb. 7. Returning to the pool for the first time in two weeks, Stanford (3-0, 0-0 MPSF) showed little signs of rust and scored five goals in each period to reach the 20-goal mark for the third straight game. Barone was one of 11 different players to find the net for Stanford, which also received a hat trick from Juliette Dhalluin. Natalia Szczerba finished with three assists. The Cardinal held a slim 28-22 advantage in shot attempts but cashed in on power play chances, converting five of its nine opportunities.

The nation's only program to have participated at every NCAA Championship since the event's inception, Stanford put the finishing touches on a dominant campaign in 2025. In addition to producing one of only four 15-0 starts in school history, the Cardinal recorded three wins apiece against fellow contenders USC and UCLA while holding the nation’s No. 1 ranking for most of the season. Stanford also captured both the NCAA and MPSF crowns in the same season for the fourth time in school history (2025, 2023, 2022, 2014).

• Stanford, which is chasing its fourth national championship in five seasons and 11th NCAA title overall, outlasted USC 11-7 to capture the 2024 NCAA crown. The championship match followed a similar regular-season script of the Cardinal pairing a balanced offense with a suffocating defense. Stanford scored at least 10 goals in every game, averaged 15.9 overall and received 20 goals from nine different players. The Cardinal also excelled defensively, with its 168 goals allowed the fewest of any school in the nation.

• The challenge in 2026 will be overcoming the departure of four-time All-American Ryann Neushul, who last year was named Stanford’s eighth recipient of the Peter J. Cutino Award as the nation’s most outstanding player. Neushul, who closed out a unique seven-year career which began as a freshman in 2019, became Stanford’s first four-time NCAA champion in school history (2019, 2022-23, 2025) and departed The Farm with 228 career goals to rank fifth all-time in school history.

Few teams would be equipped to survive that type of loss but the Cardinal’s strength remains its elite depth. The offense will be led by returning All-Americans Jenna Flynn (team-high 68 goals, 31 assists, 20 multi-goal games) and Juliette Dhalluin (41 goals, 36 assists), along with Serena Browne (32 goals), Maggie Hawkins (32 goals), Kamryn Barone (23 goals) and Ella Woodhead (23 goals). Stanford also boasts the nation’s top goalkeeper in All-American Christine Carpenter, who finished with 165 saves during her first full season. Named MVP of both the MPSF All-Tournament Team and NCAA All-Tournament Team, Carpenter was also a second-team All-MPSF selection.

• Three of those six players - Flynn (United States), Dhalluin (France) and Browne (Canada) - competed for their country at the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics while the Cardinal added a fourth over the summer in Sienna Green (Australia), a 2024 Olympic silver medalist and All-American transfer from UCLA who totaled 50 goals in two seasons with the Bruins.

• Stanford’s already-decorated coaching staff also got even stronger this summer, with the most revered and accomplished player in the history of women’s water polo returning to The Farm. Joining the staff as associate head coach is Brenda Villa, one of only two four-time Olympic medalists (2000, 2004, 2008, 2012) who won 20 medals overall in her playing career representing Team USA. A three-time All-American and Hall of Famer who led the Cardinal to its first NCAA title in 2002, Villa became Stanford’s first Peter J. Cutino Award recipient and was later named the Female Water Polo Player of the Decade (2000-09) by FINA Aquatics World Magazine.