By DARREN MILLER
hawkeyesports.com
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Some things are worth the wait.
It took guard Alexis Sevillian nearly three years to compete on a college basketball court after committing to the University of Iowa in the fall of her junior year at Goodrich (Michigan) High School.
When Sevillian arrived at Iowa for the 2016-17 season, the Hawkeyes were stacked at guard. Seniors Ally Disterhoft and Alexa Kastanek were here, as well as sophomore Tania Davis (a high school teammate) and freshmen Kathleen Doyle and Makenzie Meyer. After talking it over with her parents, Arteka and Clarence, and head coach Lisa Bluder, Sevillian was redshirted.
“That allowed me to adjust to the school, schoolwork, become more comfortable with basketball and the system,” Sevillian said. “It gave me confidence and allowed me to learn the offense. I grew so much.”
Some things are worth the wait.
Sevillian was a finalist for Michigan Miss Basketball in 2016 when she averaged 22.9 points, 3.6 assists and 3.6 steals per game as a Goodrich senior.
Like most college freshmen who are the go-to option in high school and AAU, it took time for Sevillian to adjust to the Division I setting…and diminished playing time. But that is when she adopted a “we before me” attitude that led to her twice being named a Hawkeye captain.
“I was able to learn in practice and give it my all,” Sevillian said. “Not seeing a minute on the court allowed me to be humble and taught me to grow in different aspects of the game.”
“I didn’t want her to use a year without contributing to our success,” Bluder said. “I knew if she waited one more year it would balance our recruiting a little bit.”
Some things are worth the wait.
In Sevillian’s three seasons in an Iowa uniform, the Hawkeyes have never won less than 23 games and never lost more than eight games in a season. In 96 career games, she averages 6.6 points, 2.3 assists and 1.4 3-point field goals per game. Nine times last season she scored in double figures and handed out a career-high eight assists against Penn State.