Bailey earned all-league honors at Spokane’s University High. And as she watched her brothers play college basketball (either online or in person when Brett’s San Diego team came north to play Gonzaga in Spokane), her desire to follow in their footsteps crystalized.
From her brothers, Bailey learned what it would take to compete at the college level. Over the years, their toughness and passion for the game seeped into her character.
She would need both traits at Master’s, a school she heard about from a neighbor in her hometown: TMU’s all-time leader in 3-pointers made, Zoe Price (Scott). Bailey has dealt with a nagging shoulder injury throughout her four college seasons. This year, she was forced to question whether even to play, knowing that if she did, she would only be delaying surgery until after the season.
“I talked to (Master’s coach Dan Waldeck), I sat in his office and I was completely honest, ‘This is what I’m going through. This is what I’m feeling,’” Bailey recalls. “He was so supportive and said he wants what’s best for me, wants me to be healthy and not to be in misery every single day.” Ultimately, she decided to play, and every day since has been “a battle.”
“I didn’t want to live with the regret of not trying,” she says. “I told coach I’d try, but who knows if I’d make it through the year. I wanted to give everything for this team.”
That’s the spirit Kyle always admired in his sister. He loved her tenacity and the way she wore her passion for the game and her teammates on her sleeve. She was tough, but not cold-hearted, something Kyle, who regularly commutes from Costa Mesa, California, for TMU’s home games, still believes is true.
“She can beat a team by 30 and have no guilt,” he says, “and then afterward go talk to them about Jesus.”