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Carlie Latta

Aggies Head West for Showdown with San José State

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Women's Basketball 1/23/2025 4:26:00 PM
LOGAN, Utah – Utah State women's basketball heads west to take on San José State (9-11, 2-5 MW) on Saturday, Jan. 25, at 2 p.m. (MT).
 
HOW TO FOLLOW
All conference games will be available to watch on the Mountain West Network. Radio coverage for all games will be provided on 107.7 FM and the Varsity Network, with Ajay Salvesen on the call. Links to live stats for all games will be available on utahstateaggies.com, while updates will also be provided through the team's social media outlets.
 
AGGIES VS EVERYONE
Utah State leads the all-time series against San José State, 20-17, and won the most recent matchup last season, with then-junior Samiana Suguturaga hitting a 3-pointer in the final minute to give USU a 71-70 win in San José. The win snapped a streak of three-straight Spartan wins in the series. Utah State is 8-10 against the Spartans in San José, but has won two of the past three. The Aggies won 10 straight against SJSU from 2008 through 2012. The two sides played only once as non-conference foes back in 1980 and have met only once in the postseason, resulting in a 99-85 Spartan win in the opening round of the MW Tournament in 2015.
 
IN A VARIETY OF WAYS
The Aggies have had seven different players lead the team in scoring this season, with Stubbs leading the way with a total of nine games as the team's leading scorer. Junior guard Jamisyn Heaton is close behind with four games leading the Aggies in scoring.Junior guard Mia Tarver has led the team twice, while freshman guards Carlie Latta, Elise Livingston, Taliyah Logwood and Denae Skelton have each led the team in scoring on one occasion this season.
 
USU has five different players averaging at least 8.0 points per game this season: Jamisyn Heaton (9.1 ppg), Carlie Latta (8.2), Taliyah Logwood (8.7), Cheyenne Stubbs (14.8) and Mia Tarver (9.1). Utah State has never had five players average 8.0 points per game or more over a full season, and has had even four such players only eight times in program history.
 
YOUNG & UNAFRAID
Utah State is tied for second the nation with four freshmen who are averaging at least 5.0 points per game this season: Carlie Latta (8.2 ppg), Elise Livingston (5.6 ppg), Taliyah Logwood (8.7 ppg) and Denae Skelton (5.8 ppg).
 
REACHED THE SUMMIT
With a fastbreak layup, senior guard Cheyenne Stubbs reached the 1,000-point mark for her career. Stubbs has scored 680 points in an Aggie uniform after totaling 358 in two seasons at Canisius prior to coming to Utah State. Stubbs also only needs five more appearances to qualify for Utah State's all-time career scoring average list (50 games minimum). Stubbs' current scoring average of 15.6 points per game in an Aggie uniform would rank fourth all-time in program history behind only Funda Nakkasoglu (19.2), April Hatch (17.2) and Sharon Epps (17.2).
 
WITH THE ASSIST
Utah State has already registered 14 games this season with double-digit assists, equaling last year's mark of 12 such games. The Aggies are averaging 11.1 assists per game this season, nearly two-and-a-half more assists per game than last year, the second-biggest improvement among teams in the Mountain West.
 
FROM DOWNTOWN AND AT HEIGHT
Sophomore forward Gracie Johnson is one of just two full-time players in the country this season standing 6-foot-5 or taller and shooting over 35.0 percent on at least one 3-point attempt per game, joining Miami (FL)'s Natalija Marshall. Since 1981-82, there have been only 38 instances across 25 players 6-5 or taller who have shot 35.0 percent or better on at least one 3-point attempt per game over a full season at the Division-I level, and only two such instances in MW history (Mallory McGwire, Boise State, in 2019-20 and 2020-21).
 
ON GUARD
Freshman guard Taliyah Logwood is one of only three guards in the Mountain West that is shooting at least 50 percent from the field, joining Air Force's Jayda McNabb and San Diego State's Nat Martinez. Logwood has shot 34-of-68 from the field this season and would become the first Aggie guard in program history to shoot over 50 percent for a full season.
 
FRESHMAN PHENOM
Freshman guard Carlie Latta was named the Mountain West Freshman of the Week after posting a career-high 19 points against Colorado State. Latta shot 8-of-12 from the field, incluidng 3-of-5 from deep, and added four rebounds, two assists and a steal. Latta scored seven unanswered points on her own in the final minute of the first half to help the Aggies erase a double-digit deficit in the contest. Latta's 19 points were the most by an Aggie freshman since the 2016-17 season when Shannon Dufficy scored 21 at Arizona and Olivia West also recorded 19 points against New Mexico. This is also Utah State's first weekly award of any kind from the MW since March of 2022.
 
Latta has six instances this season of scoring 10 or more points while shooting over 40.0 percent from the field. Among freshmen, Latta is tied for 27th nationally and fourth in the Mountain West for such games.
 
TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN
Stubbs is currently tied for second in the Mountain West with 18.7 points per game during conference play, and is tied for fifth in the conference with 2.1 made 3s per game. Sophomore forward Gracie Johnson ranks seventh in the MW with 1.1 blocks per game during conference play, also ranking fifth over the full season with 1.3 rejections per game.
 
LET IT FLY
Utah State is currently first in the MW and eighth in the nation with 29.6 attempts from 3-point range per game this season. The Aggies also rank 36th nationally and second in the MW with 8.4 made 3-pointers per game. USU's 3-point rate (the number of 3-point attempts relative to a team's total field goal attempts) of 42.3 percent also ranks first in the MW and eighth in the nation. Colorado State ranks second in the MW with 37.4 percent.
 
The Aggies have 11 players averaging at least one 3-point attempt per game (Banks, Heaton, Johnson, Latta, Livingston, Logwood, Skelton, Smith, Stubbs, Tarver, and Ward), tying for the fourth-most such players in the country.
 
I AM SPEED
The Aggies currently rank as the fastest team in the Mountain West, averaging 75.2 possessions per 40 minutes. New Mexico ranks second in the MW with 74.0 possessions per 40 minutes, while Niagara currently leads the nation with 83.7 possessions per 40 minutes. 
 
ERASERS
Utah State has made a habit out of climbing out of early holes this season. Some of the notable deficits the Aggies have fought back from include:
 - cutting a 14-point deficit to Northern Colorado to only three points in the opening half
 - fully erasing a 14-point lead at the start of the fourth quarter at Omaha to force overtime
 - cutting a 23-point deficit against Stetson to only a single point
 - trimming a 19-point deficit at Grand Canyon to only four points 
 - coming back from 11 down at Idaho to tie the game before halftime
 - erasing an 11-point deficit versus Colorado State to take the lead in the third quarter
 - cut a 16-point third-quarter lead down versus Boise State down to five points in the final minute
 - came back from 15 down at Nevada to within three points in the fourth quarter
 - climbed back from a 15-point second quarter deficit to within four points in the third quarter against New Mexico
 
ON THE UPSWING
Utah State ranks at the top of the Mountain West and near the top of the nation in several year-over-year improvements from the 2023-24 season. USU is averaging 8.8 more field goal attempts per game, the largest in year-over-year improvement among MW teams and the fourth-largest in the nation). The Aggies also are averaging 12.7 more 3-point attempts per game (first in MW, third in nation) and have a 15.0 percent increase in 3-point rate over last season (first in MW, second in nation). USU is averaging 2.8 more steals per game than last season (first in MW), 8.0 more points per game (second in MW), 4.7 more possessions per game (first in MW), 4.5 more forced turnovers per game (first in MW), 3.1 more made field goals per game (second in MW) and 3.5 more made 3-point field goals per game (first in MW).
 
STOLEN GOODS
Mia Tarver came away with a career-high seven steals against CSUN, a feat only accomplished 28 times previously by a total of 19 players in school history. Only four players have recorded at least seven steals in on game since the program's reinstatement in 2003 (Elise Nelson twice, Alice Coddington twice, Jenna Johnson, Danyelle Snelgro). Tarver's seven steals are tied for the 14th-most all-time for a single game at Utah State. Tarver is currently fouth in the MW with 2.2 steals per game. As a team, the Aggies rank 78th nationally and second in the Mountain West with 9.4 steals per contest.
 
BLOCK PARTY
Last year, Gracie Johnson became one of just four players in program history to have three games with five or more blocks in a season. Additionally, she became just the second freshman to ever do so, joining all-time program block leader Deja Mason. With eight blocks against Boise State, Johnson tied the all-time program record for blocks in a single game. Johnson finished the season with 36 blocks and now has 59 for her career, needing only eight more to break into the top-10 all-time at Utah State.
 
HEATON UP
Heaton recorded her first career double-double against Omaha, finishing with 18 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Aggies. Utah State has two double-doubles on the season as Stubbs recorded her third career double-double with 16 points and 11 rebounds against CSUN. 
 
AROUND THE (NATION) IN (34) DAYS
The Aggies returned to the Dee Glen Smith Spectrum on Wednesday, Dec. 18, to host UC Riverside, a full 34 days since the team's previous home outing against Cal State Bakersfield on Nov. 14. Utah State's 34 days between home games is the sixth-longest in the nation this season, ranking behind Columbia (47 days), UC Irvine (46), Texas A&M-Commerce (45), Stephen F. Austin (40) and William & Mary (35). By total road and neutral games played between home games, Utah State's eight games is tied for the longest streak in the nation alongside Stephen F. Austin. 
 
STARTER JACKETS
Utah State returns two full-time starters from last year in senior guards Cheyenne Stubbs and Ivory Finley. The Aggies also return a further two players with starting experience. Senior guard/forward Samiana Suguturaga started the final 13 games of the 2023-24 season, while senior forward Allyzee Verdan made nine total starts on the year, including each of the last seven games.
 
TOP SCORERS
Utah State returns its top scorer from 25 of 31 games last season, including the team's exhibition. Stubbs led the Aggies with 22 games as the leading scorer last season, while each of senior forrward Allyzee Verdan, senior guard/forward Samiana Suguturaga and senior guard Ivory Finley each recorded one game as USU's leading scorer.
 
EN FUEGO
Stubbs recorded a pair of 30-point games in 2023-24, becoming just the 19th player in program history to ever top the 30-point plateau, and only the 12th to do so in multiple games. Stubbs posted a career-high 32 points in Utah State's win at Nevada on Jan. 31, going 10-of-24 shooting (.417) from the floor, 2-of-8 shooting (.250) from 3-point range and 10-of-14 shooting (.714) from the charity stripe. Against UNLV, Stubbs also finished with 30 points on 7-15 shooting (.467), including a 5-9 performance from deep (.556), and went (11-14) from the free throw line. She is just the 10th Aggie with multiple 30-point games in the same season. In total, Utah State has seen 48 games in which an Aggie has hit 30 points or more. Stubbs' 32 points against Nevada are tied for the 20th-most in a game in Aggie history. 
 
WELL-TRAVELED
Utah State has players from eight different states on its roster, plus three international players in senior forward Allyzee Verdan (French Guiana), junior forward/center Sophie Sene (France) and freshman guard Denae Skelton (Canada). This is the most international players on USU's roster since fielding four such players in 2019-20. Utah (four) and Idaho (three) are the only states from which multiple Aggies hail. This is the first time Utah has been the most populous state on USU's roster since the 2021-22 season.
 
INTO THE HISTORY BOOKS
Last season, Stubbs put up one of the top-scoring seasons in program history. Stubbs finished the season with 482 points, passing Devyn Christensen (2011-12) and Ashlee Brown (2011-12) to move into eighth all-time at USU. 
 
                Rk          Player Year     Points
                6.            Funda Nakkasoglu     2014-15              504
                7.            April Hatch      1983-84             487
                8.            Cheyenne Stubbs     2023-24             482
                9.            Ashlee Brown 2011-12              468
                10.         Devyn Christensen     2011-12              467
 
Stubbs' average of 16.1 points per game narrowly missed the all-time top-10 at USU. However, Stubbs did break into the top-10 in several other categories for a single season, including 3-pointers made (fifth, 59) and attempted (fourth, 174). Stubbs led the Aggies in scoring in 22 games on the year, the most times as USU's leading scorer in a single season since Funda Nakkasoglu had 25 team-leading outings in 2015-16. 
 
TRUE BLUE AGGIES
This year's team has a pair of players with family ties to Utah State. Senior guard/forward Samiana Suguturaga is the daughter of former Aggie football player Jay Suguturaga, who played tight end at USU from 2000-01. Additionally, sophomore forward Gracie Johnson's older brother, Isaac, is currently a junior on the Utah State men's basketball team. Johnson's father, Darren, played for the USU men's team in 1990-91, while her grandfather, Ronald, also played at Utah State. 
 
NEW TEAM, WHO DIS?
The Aggies welcome 10 newcomers to the 2024-25 squad. Utah State brings in three transfers in juniors Sophie Sene (Rhode Island), Mia Tarver (Salt Lake CC) and Jamisyn Heaton (College of Southern Idaho). USU brings in a total of seven freshmen, including Ava Smith (Camas, Washington), Denae Skelton (West Kelowna, B.C., Canada), Riley Ward (Preston, Idaho), Carlie Latta (Paul, Idaho), Karlie Banks (Laclede, Idaho), Elise Livingston (Millville, Utah) and Taliyah Logwood (Richmond, California).
 
KEEPING IT IN THE FAMILY
Several players have family ties to athletes who have played at the collegiate level, with several also playing professionally. Freshman guard/foward Taliyah Logwood has a pair of cousins in Brian Johnson and Raelon Singleton who each played football at Utah, with Brian Johnson also now serving as an assistant head coach and passing game coordinator for the Washington Commanders of the NFL. Freshman guard Elise Livingston's sister, Erin, played volleyball for four years at BYU and signed with the Las Vegas Thrill of the Pro Volleyball Federation.  Freshman guard Ava Smith's father, Matthew, played football and won an NAIA Division II national title at Central Washington University. Freshman guard Denae Skelton's brother, Kaeden, played basketball for the University of British Columbia in Okanagan. Freshman guard Carlie Latta's sister, Aubrie Vale, played basketball at Westminster in 2019. Both senior guard/forward Samiana Suguturaga and sophomore forward Gracie Johnson have aforementioned ties to Utah State, while Johnson also has an older brother, Spencer, who played basketball at BYU.
 
DE LA GUYANE FRANÇAISE À LOGAN
Utah State senior forward Allyzee Verdan joined the Aggies all the way from her home country of French Guiana, a small South American country bordering Brazil to the north. She is one of just two French Guiana natives in Division I women's basketball, along with Duquesne's Raymi Couëta.
 
Season Tickets
Season tickets for the 2024-25 schedule are available now. Fans can purchase their tickets here or by calling the USU Ticket Office at (435) 797-0305.
 
Fans can follow USU women's basketball on Twitter, @USUWBasketball, on Instagram, @USUWBasketball, as well as on Facebook, at /USUWBB. Aggie fans can also follow Utah State Athletics on Twitter, @USUAthletics, on Instagram, @USUAthletics and on Facebook at /USUAthletics.
 
- USU -
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Players Mentioned

Ivory Finley

#0 Ivory Finley

Guard
5' 10"
Senior
Gracie Johnson

#15 Gracie Johnson

Forward
6' 6"
Sophomore
Cheyenne Stubbs

#24 Cheyenne Stubbs

Guard
5' 5"
Senior
Samiana Suguturaga

#1 Samiana Suguturaga

Guard/Forward
5' 11"
Senior
Allyzee Verdan

#31 Allyzee Verdan

Forward
6' 2"
Senior
Elise Livingston

#12 Elise Livingston

Guard
5' 9"
Freshman
Sophie Sene

#55 Sophie Sene

Forward/Center
6' 3"
Junior
Jamisyn Heaton

#32 Jamisyn Heaton

Guard
5' 10"
Junior
Mia Tarver

#23 Mia Tarver

Guard
5' 7"
Junior
Ava Smith

#3 Ava Smith

Guard
5' 8"
Freshman
Karlie Banks

#11 Karlie Banks

Guard/Forward
5' 11"
Freshman
Denae Skelton

#4 Denae Skelton

Guard
5' 8"
Freshman

Players Mentioned

Ivory Finley

#0 Ivory Finley

5' 10"
Senior
Guard
Gracie Johnson

#15 Gracie Johnson

6' 6"
Sophomore
Forward
Cheyenne Stubbs

#24 Cheyenne Stubbs

5' 5"
Senior
Guard
Samiana Suguturaga

#1 Samiana Suguturaga

5' 11"
Senior
Guard/Forward
Allyzee Verdan

#31 Allyzee Verdan

6' 2"
Senior
Forward
Elise Livingston

#12 Elise Livingston

5' 9"
Freshman
Guard
Sophie Sene

#55 Sophie Sene

6' 3"
Junior
Forward/Center
Jamisyn Heaton

#32 Jamisyn Heaton

5' 10"
Junior
Guard
Mia Tarver

#23 Mia Tarver

5' 7"
Junior
Guard
Ava Smith

#3 Ava Smith

5' 8"
Freshman
Guard
Karlie Banks

#11 Karlie Banks

5' 11"
Freshman
Guard/Forward
Denae Skelton

#4 Denae Skelton

5' 8"
Freshman
Guard
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