OKLAHOMA STATEDecember 15, 2017"Fourth time is the charm just ask Oklahoma State's
Loryn Goodwin.
For the graduate transfer, the road to Stillwater has been long, winding and peppered with plenty of stops, but has ultimately resulted in the talented point guard finding a home in historic Gallagher-Iba Arena.
Lightly recruited out of Cypress Falls (Texas) High School, Goodwin caught the eye of then-North Texas head coach Karen Aston and thought her next four years would be spent as a member of the Mean Green program. However, the first curve in the road to Payne County presented itself before Goodwin arrived in Denton. Aston moved on to the head coaching position at the University of Texas, leaving behind an uncertain incoming freshman.
"I liked her vision for the program and the other people she was bringing in. There were five other freshmen coming in with me as well. Right before we stepped on campus, we found out Coach Aston had taken the head job at Texas," Goodwin said.
Undeterred by Aston's departure, Goodwin averaged 13.1 points per game and led the Sun Belt Conference with 83 steals during the 2012-13 season on her way to being named the league's freshman of the year. At season's end, Goodwin sat down with her family to mull her future and the decision to transfer was reached. With that, it was determined stop No. 2 on the route to Stillwater would be Indianapolis and Butler University.
"I think I really made the right decision by going to Butler. It was probably the biggest challenge for me in my college career. I went there and that staff was amazing and I could not wait to play for them. I sat out a year and then whenever it was time for them to be able to coach me, they were fired," Goodwin said. "I decided I had no film from the past year since I had to sit out, so I decided I might as well stay and play a year regardless of who was going to end up being the head coach."
And play she did. Just like her rookie campaign at North Texas, Goodwin excelled with uncertainty surrounding the remainder of her career. During the 2014-15 season for the Bulldogs, she averaged 15.6 points per game and was named an honorable mention All-Big East pick. Despite her success on the hardwood, Goodwin found herself in the all-too-familiar quest for a place to lace them up at season's end.
"I decided my family was really important to me and I was just going to go somewhere where I could go back home. They could see me play every night and I could see my grandparents and they could experience games that they hadn't been able to before," Goodwin said.
The University of Texas at San Antonio fit the bill for the Cypress, Texas native, who made her return to the Lone Star State for what she thought would be the remainder of her collegiate career.
After sitting out the 2015-16 campaign, Goodwin picked up where she had left off, adding to her list of accolades. The 5-9 point guard led the Roadrunners in scoring (17.5 ppg), assists (4.5 apg) and steals (3.0 spg), earning first-team all-league honors and Conference USA's newcomer of the year distinction. All the while, Goodwin handled her business off the floor, earning academic all-league plaudits as well.
The final bend on her road to becoming a Cowgirl had nothing to do with basketball, but everything to do with Goodwin's academic pursuits. With a degree in multidisciplinary studies in hand, Goodwin hit a snag in the pursuit of her desired graduate degree.
"It was a really great experience. Nothing at UTSA was negative. They did not have the master's program that I wanted, which is entrepreneurship. I was either going to stay there and get a master's degree in business, which had the exact same classes I had already taken or I was going to go somewhere else that had the master's that was going to help me in my career," she explained.
Not only did OSU offer the program, but a connection existed in assistant coach Ashley Davis, who was on staff during Goodwin's year at North Texas. Davis would prove to be key in landing the Cowgirls' latest standout point guard.
"I knew there would be a familiar face. It just so happened I was able to get a scholarship and be able to play basketball as well, but education was always first for me," Goodwin said.
With Goodwin seeking a place to finish her education and OSU head coach Jim Littell looking to bolster the Cowgirls' backcourt, the stars aligned for both parties. After Davis offered a favorable recommendation on her former player, Littell was sold.
"Coach Davis told our staff that she was a really good player as well as a really good kid," Littell said. "We knew she was a great person and we had a great idea about her work ethic, her tenacity on the court and in the weight room with how she attacked workouts. We felt very comfortable bringing Loryn into the Cowgirl program."
Goodwin understands the stigma many will attach to her nomadic career, but she is appreciative of those who took the time to examine her situation and afforded her the opportunity to finish her career the way she had always intended.
"When you transfer that many times, it seems that it is about you and that you are the problem and you are transferring because you did something wrong. That is how you know I was destined to be here, the fact that I got a year back from the NCAA. They looked at my story, looked at the schools I had been at and saw that it wasn't my fault. There were things that were out of my control," Goodwin said. They decided to give me that year back to help me be successful and I am really appreciative of that. It has gotten me to this point and now I am where I was always supposed to be."
Being the repeated victim of circumstance, it would be understandable if Goodwin was soured on her college days, but it is quite the contrary. She instead has taken the approach that each stop along the way has been a blessing and readied her for life in one of the sport's premiere conferences.
"Every place that I transferred, I grew and experienced something that I wasn't going to had I stayed at the same university for four years. Had I not done that, I would not have come into this so ready and so prepared and confident in what I am doing," Goodwin said. "I am really excited to be on this different journey with these girls. Everybody has a story and I am glad that they accept mine and what I have faced and what I have dealt with. It makes it an easy experience for me to be with girls who accept me for who I am and how I play."
Since arriving in Stillwater, Goodwin has resumed what she had done at each of the three previous programs, filling stat sheets.
In her first nine games as a Cowgirl, she ranks among the Big 12's best in scoring (21.6 ppg, 3rd), assists (5.1 apg, 5th) and steals (4.3, 1st).
Any questions about Goodwin's ability to play against top-level competition were quickly answered with OSU's rugged non-conference schedule. During the Cowgirls' battle with No. 12 Tennessee, she finished with 29 points and five assists on her way to securing Cancun Challenge All-Tournament Team honors.
Goodwin has since backed it up with eye-opening performances at No. 3 Mississippi State (35 points, 10 rebounds) and in
OSU's win over No. 7 UCLA (27 pts, six rebounds, five assists), proving she not only belongs in the spotlight, but thrives when said spotlight is brightest.
Having coached countless talented players over the course of his illustrious career, even Littell has been taken aback at what he has seen to this point from Goodwin.
"She has exceeded our expectations. What has really impressed me has been her work ethic, her leadership, her desire for success and how humble she has been," Littell said. "Every interview, she has never mentioned 'I', She is always deferring to her teammates and how they have made her feel comfortable and helped her assume her role in this program."
Goodwin credits being given defined responsibilities immediately and the people within the Cowgirl program with helping her adjust so quickly.
"They gave me a role up front and told me what they needed me to do, so I was able to find my way, watch film and do what I needed to do to figure out how to be the best in that role. My teammates and my coaches have all coached me up and helped me be ready for what is going on right now," Goodwin said.
Goodwin and her mature approach to the game can be traced not only to her various college stops, but also to growing up in a family of athletes.
Her father, Trampas, played football at West Texas A&M, while her mother, Laura, was a member of the Sam Houston State volleyball team.
"They were both really driven and did what I have wanted to do. They coached me up until about seventh grade. That is what has made me so mentally tough, in the weight room and in sprints and things I can control. I always want to be the hardest worker and I think they really instilled that in me at a young age, to work for everything," said Goodwin.
Additionally,
Goodwin's cousin, Marquise, currently stars for the NFL's San Francisco 49ers. The two have enjoyed a close relationship and having someone who has reached the pinnacle in his sport of choice has helped Goodwin navigate her unique college experience.
"He has helped me through my transfer situations. Every time he was there and gave me advice for what he thought I should do, if I should leave and where I should end up. He is my cousin, but he is also one of my really good friends," Goodwin said. "Seeing him succeed on the same path I am going on now gives me motivation to know that I can do it if he can do it. To also have him as a mentor and to keep me grounded and focused on what I need to do is priceless."
OSU has enjoyed success at the guard position in recent history, a fact not lost on Goodwin as she hopes to make the most of her single season in Stillwater and leave her mark on the program.
"The people who have paved the way, like Andrea Riley and Tiffany Bias. Those players have motivated me to want to fulfill the spot Coach Littell needs me to fill and play the role I need to fill," Goodwin said. "To be compared to those type of players who went on to the WNBA and were All-Americans and things like that is something that I could have never imagined, but something I am so grateful and happy that I get to do at Oklahoma State."
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Ryan Cameron, Oklahoma State WBB website