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Around
Campus

Off
Court: Meet Daria Mielosznska
The 2004-05 Big 12 Conference Newcomer of the Year in women’s
basketball is UT’s own 6-2 transfer Daria Mieloszynska,
who arrived on the UT campus this fall from Illinois Central
Junior College in Peoria. Daria is Coach Jody Conradt’s
first European player who hails from Poland. Read her story
below and come watch the junior college All-American in action
when the Texas Longhorns, ranked No. 4 nationally in mid-December,
take to the court as the two-time defending Big 12 regular
season champions.
Although her introduction to United States collegiate life
two years ago might have been "trial by fire",
Daria Mieloszynska proved early on that passion, determination
and a great sense of humor can cut through all obstacles
in her way.
Mieloszynska (pronounced Mee-low-SHZIN-skah), a 6-2 wing
player and Juco All-American, is in her first year at Texas
after spending the last two years starring at junior college
powerhouse Illinois Central College (ICC).
Mieloszynska recieved a tough welcome to America after
enrolling at ICC in the fall of 2002. After being discovered
for her basketball talents as her Polish club team toured
Massachusetts, legendary junior college coach Lorene Ramsey
offered Daria a scholarship to ICC. Mieloszynska arrived
in Illinois for orientation from her native Poland knowing, "So
very little English that for my first two weeks in Illinois
I didn't even try to speak. I just nodded to everyone, followed
my teammates around and went with the flow, you know?"
When classes started Daria found (to her horror) that Coach
Ramsey had signed her up for an introductory speech class
- in her second week in America! Most people would have crumbled
under the pressure of traveling over 4,000 miles from her
hometown of Poznan, Poland to the heartland of America -
but not Daria.
Daria showed her true nature, tackling a tough situation
with hard work coupled with an affable personality and strong
sense of humor. “Let me tell you something about what
I thought of Coach Ramsey that day," Mieloszynska says,
laughing, speaking English very clearly and quickly with
her Polish accent. "I had read British English for a
few years in Poland, but it is not the same. I didn't even
know what the word 'speech' meant! I ran to her office after
class and pleaded with her, ‘Coach, no English, no
speaking class, please’. She looked me in the eye and
said, ‘Yes Daria, you can do it, you will do this.’ She
was not my friend for a long, long time after that! But she
helped me learn a big lesson. I made a low ‘B’ in
that class, and really, she did me a favor. That class challenged
me every day. I learned how to work hard and not fail at
something very, very hard."
After being pushed into the speech class, Daria armed herself
with her own secrets to learning English: watching cartoons
and listening to rock and rap music! “It sounds silly,
but cartoon watching really helped me learn to understand
the English language,” notes Mieloszynska. “Everything
is exaggerated in a cartoon someone’s anger, happiness,
running, all those sorts of things. In a movie, if you try
and follow dialogue, you miss lots of little things in people’s
actions. I know people might not think rock and rap music
would be the best dictionary, but for me they were! I listened
to Nelly, Alicia Keys and of course, my favorite, Bob Marley,
and followed the words and phrases. It was important for
me to learn American slang, too, even if some of it isn’t
really nice!”
Making tough choices has been the way of life for Mieloszynska
ever since she discovered a passion for basketball. “In
Poland, you either go to the university and study, where
sports are not a priority, or you turn professional and play
a sport. Those were not good options for me. I hated them,” says
Daria. “I wanted to do both, and knew that I had to
come to the United States. None of this would have been possible
if my parents had not supported me in everything I wanted
to do. Then Coach Ramsey pushed me to do more than I thought
I could in academics while we had success in basketball.
This is like a dream come true.” When Texas associate
head coach Karen Aston saw Daria play a year ago, she knew
the slender, 6-2 wing player would fit perfectly into the
Longhorns lineup. After helping ICC to the JUCO National
Championship in 2003 with a 33-3 mark, Mieloszynska averaged
15.2 points and 7.8 rebounds last year for the 29-3 regional
finalist squad en route to All-American honors.
Jody Conradt saw Daria and invited her to visit the UT
campus, and it was an immediate bond between Mieloszynska
and the coaches, players and UT and Austin. “We were
intrigued with Daria, her work ethic, her style of play and
her great shooting touch, and she's done everything we've
asked of her and more,” noted Conradt. “She is
a tremendous young lady ... very teachable and coachable
with a sense of humor! We all enjoy her so much. Once she
adjusts to our system and our defensive style, we all expect
Daria to be a big contributor. She will be important in helping
us accomplish our goals this season.” Senior guard
Jamie Carey agrees. “My first impression of Daria was
a great one. She got to campus in August and played pick-up
with us for the first time. We immediately bonded with Daria
as a person and player. I couldn't wait to call Coach Aston
right after we finished that day. I told her, “Coach,
thanks for signing Daria. She gets it. She's really, really
good. She’s going to help us so much.”
Mieloszynska was named the Big 12 Newcomer of the Year
in pre-season voting by both the media and the league coaches.
To date, she has seen action in all six games (as of Dec.
10), averaging eight minutes per game. Daria understands
that her time will come."My teammates are very talented,
and I have a lot to learn about the Texas style," Daria
admits. "I am thankful to Heather (Schreiber) who has
circled me, taking me under her wing. She helps me so much
everyday and is always talking to me, giving me advice. I
am just ready to help our team."
When away from practice and games, Daria spends her time
shooting in Cooley Pavilion. “I come in at night, to
shoot, to clear my head and get better and better,” she
says. She is studying to be an athletics trainer, and enjoying
a slice of Austin life. "Right now, I would say that
my favorite things about Austin is how beautiful it is, how
nice the campus is, and eating Tex-Mex and going to coffeehouses.
I don't have a favorite coffee spot yet, but I like Mozart's
and anywhere where they are playing blues. I like to take
a book and sit and read and listen to the music," Daria
said.
When asked about her favorite reading material, Mieloszynska
doesn't hesitate in saying, "I love reading anything
about World War II and I love biographies. She just finished
reading about Mexican painter and cult figure Frida Kahlo.
Her favorite book is the first book she ever read in English, "A
Lesson Before Dying", which explores racism and the
lives of African-Americans during the 1940s in the South. “It
opened my eyes to that time in America. But, I must tell
you, for practice I read in English, for fun I read in Polish,” she
laughingly concluded.
Although making all the necessary adjustments to a new
life in America, Daria does miss some staples of Polish culture
(Polish Web sites, cabbage rolls) and especially her family.
She also misses her "house parents” (her “adopted” family)
from Peoria, John and Pat Pusey. The Puseys miss Daria as
well. They have already flown to Austin and Los Angeles to
watch the Longhorns play.
"I talk to my parents in Poland on an international
calling card when I can afford to buy them – they are
expensive, by the way! I try and talk to them about once
every two weeks. When I think of home, I miss most the smell
of fresh bread and the breakfasts my father would make, and
I miss talking to my mother and brother Sebastian about everything
and miss talking about basketball with my dad," Daria
notes. “But we all know this is the best place for
me to be. Texas is not what we think it is in Poland, which
is the stereotype that it is all ranches and oil and cowboys
and cactus,” laughed Daria. “Instead, UT is about
tradition and everyone is committed to this school with so
much pride. I knew as soon as I got to UT on my visit that
I wanted to come here. I liked how Coach Conradt approached
me. She answered all my questions and told me how important
academics are here. Other schools did not have my major,
or athletic training, and the coaches would try to convince
me to come and study something else, and I did not like that.
I wanted to study what I wanted to study and go to a great
college with great basketball.
“My final decision came when I watched my future teammates
play Baylor and win in overtime,” Mieloszynska concluded
seriously. “They showed heart and didn't give up, and
I said to myself right then, 'You know what? This is the
team I want to be a part of.’ ”A few short months
later, Daria was in Austin as part of that tradition and
part of that team, eager to play her part in future UT success.
With the attitude, work ethic and determination she's already
shown, Longhorns fans indeed can anticipate great things
from the 6-2 wing player very soon.
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