Former Durango star averaging nearly 18 points per game
Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball player and Durango native Mason Rowland looks to make a play against Central Washington on Nov. 3, 2023, during her freshman year. (Courtesy of CMU athletics)
A lot of players return from an ACL tear as a diminished version of their former self, but Durango’s Mason Rowland is not one of them.
The former Durango High School girls basketball star tore her ACL on Nov. 15, 2024, while playing for the Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball team and missed the rest of her sophomore season after winning Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year in 2023-2024.
Now a redshirt sophomore, unknowing bystanders would be hard-pressed to know she was coming off a torn ACL. Rowland is averaging 17.8 points per game, as of Friday evening, for a 13-1 Colorado Mesa squad that is dominating its opponents.
“We’ve had a great start to the year and are just looking to build off that coming out of Christmas break,” Rowland said. “We were a new group starting with so I think just trying to find the pieces and making sure everyone gelled with each other. But once we found that, we are going to be pretty tough to beat. So it’ll be exciting.”
Rowland averaged 14.6 PPG as a freshman and averaged 15.7 PPG in three games as a sophomore before getting hurt. It was a long recovery process for Rowland, as it is for all athletes who tear their ACL, and she returned to action in the summer.
The Mavericks tipped off the 2025-2026 season with the D2CCA Tip-Off Classic in British Columbia on Oct. 31. It’s a tournament Rowland enjoyed as a freshman, and it was a successful trip for the Mavericks with three wins. Rowland had a great experience getting on the court, getting through those games and realizing she can still play. Those first three games were building blocks for Rowland and the rest of the team.
Rowland said it took her about five games to not be hesitant to drive with her repaired ACL like she would in the past. Even with that hesitation, Rowland averaged 16.6 points per game in the first five games.
The Durangoan is the third-leading scorer in the RMAC with her 17.8 PPG. She’s continued to be an elite rebounding guard with 5.9 rebounds per game. Her name pops up in a lot of the RMAC individual statistical categories, including being fourth in the conference with 3.6 assists per game; she’s eighth in the RMAC with a 1.1 assist to turnover ratio; Rowland is ninth in the conference with a 43.1 field goal percentage and third in the conference with an 81.5 free-throw percentage.
“Since her injury last year, she’s been determined, and she did her rehab as best as she could and was in the gym all the time,” Colorado Mesa head coach Taylor Wagner said. “She’s one of those kids who has put her heart and soul into everything, and that’s what’s helped her bounce back a little bit quicker than maybe some of the other kids that we’ve had that have had ACL injuries.”
One area that Rowland has really improved in is her 3-point shooting. Known as an elite driver coming out of Durango High School, Rowland shot 33% from 3-point range as a freshman and 25% on limited attempts before her injury as a sophomore.
This season, Rowland is shooting 41% from 3-point range. She’s turned into one of the top 3-point shooters in the conference, ranking second in 3-point field goal percentage and third in 3-point field goals per game. Through 14 games, Rowland already has more 3-point attempts and makes than in her entire 32-game freshman year.
Rowland and Wagner both said the time Rowland had off due to injury helped her improve her shooting. It took a while for Rowland to compete against others, but she could work on her shooting a lot sooner. Wagner said the coaching staff didn’t do anything to her shot; the improvement has been because of the time she put in.
The improvement in Rowland’s game has certainly helped the Mavericks get off to such a great start. Since Colorado Mesa’s lone loss to West Texas A&M on Nov. 14, the Mavericks have had one close win, a 57-49 win, the next game on Nov. 16. Other than that, Colorado Mesa has won eight of its last nine games by at least 25 points. The Mavericks are 11th in the WBCA NCAA Division II Top 25 women’s basketball coaches’ poll.
Besides Rowland, the Mavericks have arguably the best player in the conference in back-to-back RMAC Player of the Year, Olivia Reed Thyne. The senior forward is averaging 18.6 PPG and 10.6 RPG to create a dynamic duo for the Mavericks.
“Mason’s taken a lot of pressure off Olivia scoring-wise,” Wagner said. “Last year, Olivia seemed like she always had to be the girl the go-to girl. With Mason’s ability to get a bucket, that one-two punch has been really good this year. They’re starting to feed off each other a little bit better and playing off each other. So they’ve evolved.”
Durango fans won’t get to see Rowland and the Mavericks this season in Durango, as the Fort Lewis College vs. Colorado Mesa game will be in Grand Junction. However, after going 50-13 the last two seasons with two NCAA tournament appearances, the Mavericks will likely have plenty of big games remaining this season.
“The sky’s the limit for us right now,” Rowland said. “We are definitely a team that focuses on one game at a time, but we want to win the RMAC regular season championship, host the RMAC tournament, win the RMAC tournament, hosts regionals and win regionals all the way up to a national championship.”
bkelly@durangoherald.com













