Thank you for checking out Basketball Across Minnesota, my weekly look at some of the state's top hoops stories, from preps to pros. — Marcus Fuller
Former Minnesota high school stars Gianna Kneepkens and Jenna Johnson didn't know anything about Utah women's basketball when coaches started recruiting them from Salt Lake City.
Now the second-year starters are vital pieces on the Utes' highest-ranked team in program history at No. 8 in the Associated Press and coaches' polls after a 14-0 start, including 3-0 in the Pac-12 through Thursday.
Kneepkens, from Duluth, and Johnson, from Medina, were immediate impact players in the Pac-12 as all-league freshmen last year. And Utah has built on a program-record turnaround from 5-16 before they got there to 21-12 and an NCAA tournament berth under coach Lynne Roberts last season.
Now the Utah women are vying for their first Pac-12 women's hoops title behind Kneepkens (14.1 points a game) and Johnson (11.6), the team's second- and third-leading scorers.
"I feel like last year set the stage, getting that experience to be the best version of ourselves," Kneepkens said. "We gained great players like [leading scorer and USC transfer Alissa Pili]. Being able to grow and keep reaching places that Utah has never reached is an awesome experience."
Kneepkens, who scored a state-record 67 points in her last high school game for Duluth Marshall in 2021, ranks fourth all-time in Minnesota girls history in career points. But the 5-11 sharpshooter didn't commit to Utah until after Johnson, a top-50 recruit and 6-2 forward, picked the Utes as a junior at Wayzata.
"It's a thousand miles away from home, and not too many people have gone here from Minnesota," Johnson said. "But we just built a great relationship with the coaching staff. They liked how we played and fit their system. They took a chance on us, and we took a chance on them. It worked out."