CORVALLIS — Tiara Bolden admits she didn’t inherit an aptitude for music from her family. Or dance moves.
But she can cook, she said. Meals and defenders.
“My mom, she played basketball, track, all that,” Bolden said. “My dad’s side, it’s nothing but musicians or NARPs. Non-athletic regular people.”
The star guard for Oregon State women’s basketball gives her father Dennis credit, however: he and his brother Chris contributed to a platinum record with writing, production and arrangement credits on “EV3,″ the third studio album from 90s girl group En Vogue.
Both brothers — particularly Bolden’s uncle Chris — have a lengthy history in the music business. Dennis is a talented pianist who loves to play the organ. Bolden said her father and his siblings pursued a record deal and thought they might be the next Jackson 5, then known as the “Golden Boldens.”
That nickname has stuck with Bolden among some of her OSU teammates, she said with a grin.
—
Music is a binding force for Bolden’s family, but so is sports. Bolden first got into basketball by watching older brother Denzel, who she speculates is named after another icon of the 90s: Denzel Washington.
In second grade, Bolden signed up for youth basketball. Growing up in Eugene, she had a chance to watch Sabrina Ionescu and the Ducks play up close. But it wasn’t until the OSAA state tournament her junior year of high school that the Churchill High School graduate said she fell in love with the game.
“We were fortunate enough to play against Crater, and this is like the biggest game of the year for everybody,” Bolden said. “And we played it in Gill Coliseum. I had the time of my life in that game. I hit this little step back three and everybody went crazy and it blew up on Twitter.”
That game made Bolden realize she could play at the next level. After Churchill’s state tournament run was over, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Bolden played one last, truncated high school season the following summer and made the jump to junior college.
After one season at Eastern Arizona College in remote Thatcher, Arizona near the New Mexico border, Bolden transferred to Division I La Salle in Philadelphia. Time far away from home helped Bolden grow as a person and hone her game with hundreds of shots per day behind the scenes, she said.
After one season with the Explorers, an opportunity with Scott Rueck and OSU popped up. In a family full of Ducks, Bolden decided she would be a Beaver.
“My whole family, they all went to U of O, they graduated from there,” Bolden said. “And I was the one kid that was like, ‘You know what? I want to do something to my family hasn’t done.’ I wanted to go to Oregon State. Out of all the places that I’ve been to, one of the biggest things that I gave as, like, a piece of advice for other people, is to go where you’re wanted, but also go where you feel like you’re going to be supported the most.
“I’ve told Scott (Rueck), I wish I was here for all four years. Just because of the experiences and the way that people welcome you with open arms, it’s very special.”
Bolden averaged 8.1 points per game in her first season with the Beavers in 2024-25. But this season, after an eventful camp which included a season-ending knee injury to leading returner Catarina Ferreira, Bolden has stepped into a leading role by averaging a team-high 16.1 points per game on better than 50% shooting.
That 10-game run included tying her career-high with 25 points against Illinois, pulling down a team-high 11 rebounds against Utah State, and a return home to Eugene, where she finished with 16 points in a loss to the Ducks. The Beavers are 6-4 entering a matchup with undefeated Arizona State on Sunday.
With family packing the stands at Matthew Knight Arena, Bolden described the game at Oregon as “weird” but meaningful. It was another chance to draw parallels between the life she grew up with and the one she’s been able to find at OSU.
“We all grew up in a competitive household, whether it was games, cooking competitions, talent shows, things like that,” Bolden said. “But our family is definitely one that sticks by each other through thick and thin. And my family’s so big that it felt like every person I saw in town was basically like my cousin.
“So, that’s where basically my sense of community came from, how I grew up. And that transcends into college sports with me wanting to be in this community (at OSU). I’ve always had a big family that is always going to be there to support me no matter what.”