The Pac-12 Friday miniseries gets closer to its finale; the big surprise here is that the UCLA Bruins—owners of 11 national titles in basketball—are not the “winningest”program in the history of the Conference of (real NCAA) Champions. Of course, this is just about games won and lost while in the league, so it’s contextual information, for sure. So these teams below are demonstrative of how good ICLA has been through its past.

5.  1974

The only team on this list to not win the national title, these Bruins went 26-4 overall, including 12-2 in conference play (first place). They finished No. 2 in the Associated Press poll and No. 1 in the SRS rankings. However, after reaching the Final Four, UCLA infamously lost to North Carolina State in a classic game often shown still on ESPN today and had to settle for winning the third-place game against Kansas. Oh well!

4. 1973

One of the multiple UCLA teams that went undefeated (30-0), the Bruins won the Pac-8 with a 14-0 record. They were No. 1 in the AP poll and No. 1 SRS rankings, of course, and they waltzed through the NCAA Tournament, winning 4 games against ranked teams by an average of 16 points per game. Not sure what else to say about this team, other than no opponent came within 5 points of beating this team all year long.

3. 1967

Another 30-0 team that won the NCAA Tournament, these Bruins did the same as the team above: 14-0 in conference, No. 1 in the AP poll, and No. 1 in the SRS. UCLA won its 4 March Madness contests by an average of more than 24 points per game. Only 3 opponents came within single digits of this team all season, and 2 of them had to play a slow-down, “Four Corners” game to even achieve that. Just unreal.

2. 1968

This UCLA team “only” posted a 29-1 record on its way to another NCAA title, and the one loss was by 2 points on the road. When the Bruins faced that same team again in the Final Four? They won, 101-69. But the one defeat meant this team only finished No. 2 in the AP poll, despite being 14-0 in league play and rating out as the No. 1 team in the SRS. Folly! The team won 4 tourney games by a combined 85 points.

1. 1972

With an average margin of victory over 30 ppg, these Bruins did the routine best: 30-0 overall, 14-0 in league, No. 1 in the AP poll, No. 1 in the SRS, and another national title. That MOV matters a lot, sabermetrically, though, even if the combined tourney MOV was only 18 ppg. The Bruins beat 3 teams ranked in the AP Top 10 during their tourney run, so the SOS matters a lot here, too. Just incredible.