SALON

Cal’s Rogers carries on despite heart condition

Topics: From the Wires,

BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — For two years, Tierra Rogers cried herself to sleep each night as California’s basketball team moved forward without her.

Still grieving 20 months after her father was murdered during one of her high school games, Rogers’ career got cut short before it began. A top recruit, the highly touted freshman guard collapsed and stopped breathing in a seriously close call outside the Cal training room.

It’s been three years since that frightening day. Most with her rare heart condition never know, until it’s too late, because it is often fatal.

Rogers rarely misses practice these days, even though she has never played a minute for the Golden Bears, who jumped to No. 11 in this week’s AP Top 25 poll. Rogers steps in to help during drills as a passer, or stays busy under the basket to rebound balls and keep things moving. On game day, she is the last player the Cal starters greet for a handshake or choreographed dance move during introductions.

“A lot of tears were shed. I think of my dad a lot,” Rogers said during a recent practice. “I felt alone. I felt lost. I felt I had no control over anything in my life. I felt defeated. I was just sad and distraught at everything that happened.”

To see Rogers now, smiling, still taking part on the court in a drastically different role, is to see just how far this young woman has come in a success story that reaches from Rogers to her teammates and coaches and the entire Bay Area. Rogers recently began taking part in a clinical trial at UC San Francisco, something she hopes will help others with her health situation keep playing their sport at a high level.

She is on schedule to graduate next summer — on time, with a bachelor’s degree in African American Studies.

“She amazes me,” said Rogers’ mother, Dalonna Ingram-Rogers. “I always tell her I get my strength from her. She says, ‘Well, you and dad raised me,’ and I tell her, ‘Give yourself some credit.’ She has been through so much at a young age. It’s so easy to quit.”

On Sept. 21, 2009, Rogers collapsed at Haas Pavilion after she had trouble breathing during a workout. She was taken by ambulance to a hospital, where she spent a week for testing and observation. Once doctors determined she had a cardiac condition, she was transferred to UC San Francisco Medical Center. There, doctors discovered her condition — Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia — and implanted a defibrillator.

A high school All-American at San Francisco’s Sacred Heart Cathedral Prep, her dad was shot to death at halftime of a game across the street from her home gym on Jan. 12, 2008. She considered giving up basketball after the tragedy.

Later, the decision was made for her.

Former Cal coach Joanne Boyle, now at Virginia, still keeps in touch with Rogers whenever possible. Second-year Bears coach Lindsay Gottlieb was Boyle’s top assistant during the recruiting process with Rogers, but had left to coach Santa Barbara by the time Rogers arrived.

When Gottlieb returned last season, keeping Rogers around on scholarship was never a question.

“She is 100 percent a part of the team,” Gottlieb said. “Her presence is really felt, and her presence is really important.”

Rogers often called her mother, who lives in Houston after leaving San Francisco, in the middle of the night fighting the urge to give up, to leave town and start fresh elsewhere.

“I said, ‘We’ll cry every day, but leaving is not an option,’” her mom said.

Boyle made a point to check in on Rogers twice a day, if not more.

“She had just started to find the love of the game again when she got to Cal. Going to games brought back memories of her dad,” Boyle said. “She played the rest of the season and her heart wasn’t in it. She got to Cal and the kids said the first couple weeks she was playing awesome.

“My concern for her and listening to her talk was just, at that age, how can you handle losing your father and the thing she identified most with after she had found the love again? She had some dark, dark moments, she really did, and understandably so.”

Rogers easily could have walked away. Instead, she leaned on her support system in Berkeley. Last year, Rogers came through when teammate and then-roommate Eliza Pierre most needed a caring friend who could relate. Pierre’s older brother, Wilson, was killed at a North Hollywood party in a gang-related shooting in August 2011.

It was Rogers who flew home with Pierre to mark the one-year anniversary of his death this summer.

“I always knew I had a friend who was there for me, period. We were already close before it happened. Both of our struggles and pains have brought us together,” Pierre said. “The team is like a family in that sense. She has contributed to this team in so many other ways even though she can’t play. She stuck it out.”

Rogers still has emotional moments. Naturally, she has questioned, “Why me?”

On the tough days, Rogers opts to stay away from practice so her mood doesn’t affect her teammates. That’s not often.

“You still feel some type of loneliness,” she said.

Rogers met regularly with a counselor, plus a tutor to help with a learning disability that makes numbers and reading comprehension that much more challenging.

“I think people doubted she could do it on time, and she’s going to do it on time,” Boyle said.

Rogers led her high school team to state titles from 2006-08, including perfect 32-0 seasons in 2007 and ’08. She lost only three games in her entire four-year high school career.

“That’s all she ever thought she would do was play basketball,” her mother said. “And to not have that and still be in that surrounding, is great.”

Cal athletic trainer Ann Caslin still walks by the defibrillator in the arena hallway and instantly goes back to that day, one she will never forget.

“She’s one of those kids who comes along and you say, ‘I never will forget her,’” Caslin said. “She’s part of me.”

Rogers reports to doctors at UC San Francisco every couple of weeks — and someday, she hopes, she will be well enough to no longer need her defibrillator and still lead an active lifestyle. She can exercise at low intensity, with caution.

Because of Rogers’ story, both Caslin and Gottlieb field questions from other programs dealing with similar issues.

“I’ve really never seen her so genuinely happy. She’s an inspiration that she can take such joy in a role she never asked for and never predicted,” Gottlieb said. “She has turned every difficult situation into something positive. She’ll forever be one of the most remarkable student-athletes having never played a single game.”

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