Osseo girls' basketball senior guard Kiara Russell started playing basketball in second grade. She has been on the Orioles' varsity team for three years now, but she truly refined her skills at home competing against her two brothers.
Russell, who signed to play for Arizona State last November after receiving 10 scholarship offers from college programs, said growing up playing against her older brother, Anthony Gulyard Jr., and her twin brother, Kordell, fostered her tough mentality on the court.
Russell ranks 10th in the state in points scored this season with 522 as of Tuesday. She scored her 1,500th career point in Osseo's loss to Park Center on Jan. 26.
She said she still goes to the gym with her brothers to keep improving her game.
"I do it to make myself better," Russell said. "To make myself tough, my mentality tough."
Russell's mother, Leah Hicks, said she always knew her daughter was athletic, but that Russell's brothers helped nurture their sister's competitive spirit.
"A lot of people say she plays like a dude … they never really played with her like a girl, she was always kind of tomboyish. So I think that helped," Hicks said. "[But] she had a natural athleticism, it's something that you can't teach."
Gulyard said he's proud of the way his sister is ending her high school career, especially because he's seen her grow ever since she started playing basketball.