The Hawaii women’s basketball team is off and running with a new identity for a new season.
Behind an infusion of young international talent, two-time defending Big West regular-season UH figures to pick up the pace in its 2025-26 opener against Portland State at 7 in the Stan Sheriff Center on Tuesday night.
A fresh backcourt from Down Under confidently pushed the tempo in preseason exhibition runaways from Division II neighbors Chaminade (90-33) and Hawaii Pacific (74-34) over the last two weeks.
It’s uncommon for coach Laura Beeman to start a season at home; it is just the fourth time in her 14 years at UH.
It’s unprecedented for a Rainbow Wahine hoops squad to be this heavily international — 11 hail from overseas, or more than two-thirds of the roster of 15.
Beeman said she appreciated her team’s pace and poise in its unofficial games, especially with so many of the players appearing for the first time before an unfamiliar crowd.
She noted the American style of youth basketball instruction that trickles up to the high school and college levels differs quite a bit from what’s seen internationally.
Beeman’s looking to meet them in the middle.
“I think what they do is D-I ball because they read really well off the ball and make some really great cuts,” UH’s second-winningest coach told Spectrum News in the preseason. “It’s our job to combine what we’ve done at a proven level of success and what they already know how to do naturally. I’m not going to change a kid’s style; it’s finding a sweet spot (between them and us).”
For all of its defensive prowess last year — UH was No. 7 nationally in points allowed (53.1) and No. 3 in field-goal percentage defense (.335) — it was only 291st of 353 Division I teams in scoring at 59.3.
There are six Australians, three from New Zealand and one each from Canada and Italy. When Australian Jade Peacock arrived as a freshman in 2023, on the heels of Aussie Amy Atwell’s prolific senior season that made her a 2022 WNBA draft pick, Peacock was the only international Wahine.
She said she felt a change in the gym in the first few practices in September.
“They play a lot more natural passing and cutting,” Peacock said of her countrywomen. “I know I’m a massive cutter, I love slashing, and if they see me a little bit earlier or they see me more, I’m like, oh, this is such a fun dynamic to play with.
“In recent years we’ve been more slowed down in our tempo but now it’s definitely run and gun,” she added.
Gone are all-conference guards and 1,000-point scorers Lily Wahinekapu and Daejah Phillips, veteran backup Kelsie Imai and record-setting 3-point shooter MeiLani McBee from last year’s 22-10 team. UH won the regular season in convincing fashion but stumbled in its Big West tournament opener for the second straight year.
This is UH’s last go-around in the Big West before the program leaves for the Mountain West along with most other Manoa sports in the summer of 2026.
Posts Imani Perez and Ritorya Tamilo, the anchors of UH’s defense-first squads of recent vintage, were named to the preseason all-conference team, and the Wahine were narrowly picked to win the league again by the BWC coaches.
But it was the spate of newcomers who turned heads in the exhibitions and at practice. Guards Teyahna Bond and Bailey Flavell started in the backcourt and Northern Arizona transfer Saniyah Neverson plugged right in.
Auckland native Bailey Flavell started and scored in double figures in both UH exhibitions. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
The 6-foot Neverson, the Big Sky Sixth Player of the Year at Northern Arizona, scored in double figures in both exhibitions, as did Flavell, a 5-foot-10 Auckland native with experience with the New Zealand senior national team since she was 17.
UH played 11 of 15 on the roster in the two exhibitions. Guards Jovi Lefotu, Jade Peacock and Izzy Forsyth and center Tamilo sat out while recovering from ailments. Returnees Lefotu and Tamilo were in non-contact mode throughout preseason practices.
The lithe Perez said she’s ready to roll with a quicker tempo for her senior season.
“It’s been really nice. I love to get out and run,” said Perez, a Big West second-teamer last year with averages of 7.2 points, 4.4 rebounds and over a block per game. “I feel like a lot of the girls love to get out and run. Very fast-paced team and very good at making decisions at that fast pace. … It makes other teams have to guard us differently.”
While returnees like Peacock, Kira-May Filemu and Rebecca Moors are looking to crack into the regular rotation for the first time, Beeman said nothing is assured by class and time in the program.
“I’ve never really cared about whether it’s a freshman or a senior,” Beeman said. “I want people to execute, play hard and represent the program well, and I think we’ll have a lot of those to choose from.”
Lefotu has the most experience of any UH guard, but the team is being cautious with the Iolani alumna from Kaneohe who has a history of knee injuries.
Portland State went 4-24 last season, including a 22-point home loss to UH in its opener, and has a first-year head coach in Karlie Burris. Junior guard Laynee Torres-Kahapea is a Kaneohe native and Punahou alumna.
Teyahna Bond, a freshman from Cairns, Australia, was entrusted with starting guard duties in UH’s preseason exhibitions. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Hawaii forward Imani Perez enters a senior leadership role for the Rainbow Wahine in 2025-26. (Spectrum News/Brian McInnis)
Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.