It's hard enough to make the step from high school to college basketball if you're healthy. If you're not, the task becomes that much tougher.
University of Louisiana sophomore Sonora Edwards has had more than her share of health issues to start the 2005-2006 season, but the 6-foot-2 center is finally starting to find her rhythm.
Edwards pulled down a career-high 11 rebounds in the Nov. 11 season opener at SMU and will continue to be an ever-growing presence for the Ragin' Cajuns, who host Hampton University at 3 p.m. today at Earl K. Long Gym.
"When the season started, I was weak and had migraine headaches," Edwards said. "Then I got that under control, and I rolled my ankle. And my left knee has been weak. I've been getting treatment on it.
"It's been a hard time."
Edwards' development is crucial for the Cajuns, who lost standouts Anna Petrakova and Tiffany Washington from the 22-9 squad of a year ago and need replacements in the inside game.
"It's been hard for Sonora," coach J. Kelley Hall said. "She hasn't really been healthy yet. It's been one thing and another. But she played well against SMU and had the best rebounding game of her career."
"I've had to put my priorities straight," Edwards said. "I'm here to get my education, and I'm here to do what I can for the team.
"Everyone brings something different to the team. I put myself after the team, because the team needs you."
Hall sees some of the same qualities in Edwards that he saw in a young Petrakova, and so has asked the Snook, Texas, product to use the former UL star as a model. That may take a bit more assertiveness from the team-oriented Edwards.
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Bruce Brown
bbrown@theadvertiser.com