Basketball Preview: Pulling her own weight

Measuring a woman by her weight may seem taboo.  Measuring
a woman by her heart is not.  

That’s why sophomore Julia Pitts stands just as firm as
the bigger and taller players she defends night in and night out
for the UCLA women’s basketball team.

Entering her second season, Pitts is undoubtedly a pivotal part
of this year’s Bruin squad. A mainstay in the starting
lineup, UCLA has come to depend on Pitts for her defensive presence
and rebounding.

However, because this year’s Bruin team lacks a true
center, the 6-foot-2 Pitts is often pitted against players much
bigger than herself.  

Pitts’ more than slender frame has made it difficult for
the sophomore to physically impose herself on the opposition,
something she has continuously tried to change. So far, nature
has been unaccommodating.  

“No one would guess it, but I eat more than most people in
the world,” said Pitts, who lists eating and dancing as her
two favorite activities. “I eat and eat and eat, but I
can’t gain weight.”

The undersized Pitts is doing anything and everything to put on
the extra pounds to better combat the 6-foot-4 power forwards she
faces twice a week. Unfortunately, nothing seems to work.  
 

A frequent visitor to BJ’s Pizza, Grill & Brewery and
In-N-Out Burger in Westwood, Pitts admittedly chows down on buffalo
chicken pizzas and cheeseburgers with the best of
them. However, the results simply don’t show.

“She’s tiny, she’s a twig,” UCLA coach
Kathy Olivier said. “She can put some food away, but she
has a fast metabolism.”

Pitts, who is said to live in the training room more than any
other athlete, sticks to a strict regiment in hopes that she will
start to see more muscle development. If she’s not pumping
iron or doing squats in the Acosta training center, then
she’s piling up the carbs in the De Neve dining hall.
 

“After weights, I drink the little shakes and eat the
Metrix bars, and then I eat a lot at dinner,” said Pitts of
her weekly routine.

“You always want a kid to get stronger,” Olivier
added. “Julia is a hard worker and her body will eventually
get bigger.”

With her slight frame, Pitts’ play on the court is a
dilemma in itself: Her greatest weakness is also her greatest
strength.

To her own acknowledgement, Pitts knows there’s little she
can do once a bigger player gets the ball into the low post.

However, what Pitts lacks in size, she more than makes up for in
speed, agility and explosiveness.

Pitts’ attributes her jumping ability and explosiveness to
her playing middle blocker for the North Torrance High School
volleyball team, while she credits her great speed and lateral
quickness to her running the 400 meters in track.

“I’m quicker than any other girl I’m playing
against,” said Pitts, who  plans to compete on the UCLA
track and field team in the spring.

“I get knocked down on the floor a lot because I’m
smaller. But when I do get knocked around, it’s nothing to
me. I can fall down on one end and beat everyone else down to the
other end.”  

For Pitts, hitting the hardwood in any form is a relief after
what she went through during her freshman year. Playing in only her
eighth game as a Bruin, her collegiate career came to a crashing
halt soon after it had begun. Pitts, UCLA’s third leading
scorer at the time, seriously injured her left knee, tearing her
ACL, lateral meniscus and the lower part of her hamstring, an
injury that necessitated two different surgeries.

“I was shocked,” Pitts said of the
injury. “When the doctor told me, I broke into
tears.

“I never really had a serious injury ever before. Being on
crutches for two months was hell. It was the worst time of my life.
I hated it.”

The injury affected almost every aspect of Pitts’ daily
life.

Instead of traversing the UCLA campus on foot, Pitts made the
daily journey in an Office of Student Disabilities cart. Instead of
playing with her teammates, Pitts sat on the bench, left wondering
what difference she would have made if she were in the game.
Instead of training and developing more muscle, Pitts was forced to
focus on rehabilitating her knee.

Pitts still carries the memories of her traumatic experience
with a heavy heart, and consequently has changed the way she
approaches the game of basketball.

“I tried to stay positive throughout most of it, but there
would always be those days that I couldn’t help but
cry,” said Pitts, who still feels some lingering pain in the
knee. “Every game I play in now I give it my all, because I
always think about how easily I can get injured again. That’s
why I always play 100 percent.”

A year later, her knee still forces her to take precautions
during even the most simple of activities.

“I’ve even been limited to dancing since my knee has
been bothering me,” Pitts said. “I have to stretch
before I go to parties now.  Sometimes I even have to ice down
when I get back.”

The physical and emotional roller coaster of Pitts’ first
year and a half at UCLA seems to be subsiding, and barring any
unforeseen injury, the sophomore will undoubtedly accomplish the
goals she has set for herself.

Somewhere near the top of the list? Put on some muscle.

“I’m going to let nature take its course,”
Pitts said. “I’m doing what I can. I eat enough, I
lift. Over time, it’s going to happen. No doubt.”

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