Colome began her collegiate basketball career at James Madison after graduating from Proctor (Massachusetts) Academy in 2015. But her immaturity hurt her playing time at JMU, Colome said, and she only played three total minutes as a freshman, leading her to transfer.
Colome wanted to be closer to her family and hometown of Lawrence, Massachusetts, and reconnected with La-Force, who had recruited her out of high school. The two met years prior while Colome hosted La-Force and her son, Martin Mann, on a school tour at Proctor. La-Force has always believed in Colome, and said the guard’s unquestionable talent made the decision a “no-brainer.”
“She knew she was kind of taking a risk with me,” Colome said.
By transferring, Colome had to redshirt for a season, her second consecutive on the bench. She became distracted. She’d often arrive to practice as it was beginning instead of 15 minutes early like her other teammates. Colome didn’t know why La-Force and other coaches criticized her — she wasn’t allowed to play that year, anyway.
“She’s the type of kid that just wants to play, play, play,” La-Force said. “She didn’t understand the importance of practicing to get to that level.”
But when she returned to the court as a redshirt sophomore, she starred. The shifty guard had scoring outbursts of 25, 19, 18 and 17. After starting 12 of URI’s first 17 games that year, she appeared exclusively off the bench in the final 15 games.
Off-court issues persisted, and Colome’s goofy, immature side flashed. Once, she impulsively bought a bicycle at Wal-Mart and rode it everywhere for three days, even joining a campus biker club, before La-Force told her she’d have to stop to prevent injury and soreness. She’d record trick shot videos and wear “completely unmatched” outfits featuring clothes three sizes too large, said Nicole Jorgensen, a former teammate.
As losses continued to pile up last season, Colome realized she had to buy in and set a better example for her teammates. She wasn’t ready to be a leader until her final year, Jorgensen said, but a realization after a team meeting led to her accepting the role. She was URI’s top scorer at the time.
“I started realizing how vital I was to the team, and I matured,” Colome said. “I had to hold myself accountable. I had to start coming in early. Do the extra things, be more disciplined.”