ŠĀ°Ä²ŹæŖ½±

Bringing the Heat

By Dick Anderson Photo by Logan Bury

Playing through injuries, fatigue, and in front of opposing crowds, Oxyā€™s ā€˜relentlessā€™ womenā€™s hoops team wins its way into the NCAA tourney

Speaking to The ŠĀ°Ä²ŹæŖ½± newspaper after her first game back in action last November, Toni Thompson ā€™24ā€”the high-scoring 5'9" guard who missed the entire 2022-23 womenā€™s basketball season with a torn patellar tendonā€”all but prophesied the Tigersā€™ SCIAC fortunes for her senior year. ā€œBased on our last gameā€™s performance, I think itā€™s very feasible for us to end up in the top four [in the conference],ā€ she said. ā€œI know we have a fighting chance to win the championship and make it to the. national [tournament], and Iā€™m looking forward to it.ā€

Toni Thompson '24, ŠĀ°Ä²ŹæŖ½± women's basketball
Toni Thompson ā€™24 (shown in action against Chapman last November) led the SCIAC in scoring this season, averaging nearly 25 points per game. ((Photo by Sam Leigh)

Sixteen weeks later, ŠĀ°Ä²ŹæŖ½± punched its ticket to the NCAA Division III Womenā€™s Basketball Tournament for only the third time in school history with a 66-58 victory over top-seeded Cal Lutheran on February 24 in the SCIAC Postseason Tournament championship. The third-seeded Tigers reached the finals by defeating second-seeded La Verne, 76-70, in another road contest on February 22.

ā€œOur [preseason] goal was to just make it to the SCIAC Conference Tournament,ā€ said First Team All-SCIAC center Ainsley Shelsta ā€™26, who averaged 13.7 points and 10 rebounds per game for the Tigers in her sophomore season. ā€œThen somewhere along the way, that goal turned into winning the tournament and getting here. We put in all the work every single day ā€¦ playing through injuries, playing through fatigue, playing through everything to get here.ā€

In their first trip to the NCAA Tournament in 13 years, ŠĀ°Ä²ŹæŖ½± ended its postseason run March 1 in Abilene, Texas, with a 65-53 loss to Hardin-Simmons University. Not counting two preseason exhibition wins, Oxy finished the season with a 20-6 recordā€”the Tigersā€™ best showing since 2009-10.

 Oxy women's basketball coach Anahit AladĀ­zhanĀ­yan ā€™07
ā€œCoach Heatā€ huddles with her players in the NCAA opening-round game in Abilene, Texas, on March 1.Ā (Photo by Scott Burkhalter)

ā€œIā€™m super proud of my team and this season and how hard weā€™ve played, how competitive weā€™ve been,ā€ Coach Anahit Aladzhanyan ā€™07 said in a postgame press conference in Abilene. ā€œWe fought ā€™til the end every game and though weā€™re disappointed by this outcome, Iā€™m super proud of the Tigers.ā€

The Tigers previously won the SCIAC Postseason Tournament in 2009 and 2011, when Aladzhanyan was an assistant to then-Head Coach Heidi VanDerveer. Aladzhanyanā€”known to players and colleagues as ā€œCoach Heatā€ā€”took over the program following VanDerveerā€™s departure in 2012.

Going back to the NCAA Tournament as a head coach felt ā€œamazing,ā€ says Aladzhanyan, who majored in psychology (with a minor in kinesiology) as a student at Oxy. ā€œI am so proud of my team and staff and really wanted everyone to experience the NCAA Tournament, as it is such a special experience.ā€

Following a 2022-23 campaign that saw the Tigers go 11-14 overall and finish 5-11 in conference play, Oxy improved to 11-5 in the SCIAC regular season, trailing co-champions Cal Lu and La Verne by two games.

Coach Heat attributes the Tigersā€™ turnaround ā€œto the hard work, competitive drive, growth mindset, and toughness of our team,ā€ she says. ā€œI also attribute it to our health, and remaining healthy throughout the season.ā€

That begins with Thompson ā€™24, an All-SCIAC First Team selection this year and SCIAC Tournament MVP, who closed out her college career with 1,017 pointsā€”a remarkable output in a career that was limited to two seasons due to the pandemic and injury.

Thompson, an economics/media arts and culture double major from Newbury Park, averaged 24.8 points as a senior, scoring a season-high 42 points in the Tigersā€™ 85-81 victory over Cal Lu on January 3. She led the conference in scoring and was the fifth-leading scorer in all of Division III this year.

Gabriela Etopio ā€™24 Oxy women's basketball
Gabriela Etopio ā€™24, an urban and environmental policy major from Las Vegas, goes up for a shot in the Tigers' NCAA Tournament opening-round game against Hardin-Simmons. (Photo by Scott Burkhalter)

For Thompson and fellow seniors Amaia McCoy and Gabriela Etopio, ā€œGoing from dead last [in the conference their sophomore season] to making the NCAA Tournament is a huge deal, not just for us but for the school in general,ā€ she said after the game. ā€œI could not be prouder of my teammates.ā€

Looking ahead to next season, the Tigers will return a playoff-tested group of players including rising juniors Shelsta, Paige Yasukochi, Dara Tokeshi, and Dominique Cabading. ā€œHaving that core group back, my hope is that we keep climbing,ā€ said AladĀ­zhanyan. (She and her assistantsā€”Isaiah Gatewood-Flowers, Alma Garcia ā€™81, and Lashell Swannā€”were named SCIAC Coaching Staff of the Year in womenā€™s basketball.)

Regardless of what the future may bring, this yearā€™s Oxy squad wonā€™t soon be forgotten. ā€œOne of the words thatā€™s on the board every game is ā€˜relentless,ā€™ and I think they embody that,ā€™ Coach Heat said of her players. ā€œWeā€™re going to give it our all, and they show it every possession on the floor.ā€