CU Buffs’ Jaylyn Sherrod, Kindyll Wetta share defensive bond

BOULDER — In the moments fans can’t see, Jaylyn Sherrod is pushing Kindyll Wetta to her defensive brink.

Case-in-point: Last year, Wetta and Sherrod were fiercely competing against each other in one of the staple practice drills for CU women’s basketball — a game called “50 Passes” where fouls are hardly called and an emphasis is put on being able to dish under pressure.

“We almost broke out into a fight,” Wetta recalled with a laugh. “We love each other to death, but we both want to win so badly. We’re both handsy on defense, disruptive, annoying. So I’m getting mad because she’s fouling me, and I’m fouling her, and nothing’s getting called.

“Afterwards at the lockers, she was like, ‘We good?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, we’re fine.’ It’s never an issue — we both know the other is coming from a good place. We’ve established that relationship to where competitiveness in practice doesn’t negatively affect our relationship on the floor in games. It (drives) it, and certainly on the defensive end for me.”

Buffs head coach JR Payne declared Wetta the “best defender in America” after CU’s win over USC, a label directly tied to Wetta’s relationship with Sherrod over the last few years. Last year’s tension in the “50 Passes” drill epitomizes the competitive bond between the two point guards and locker-room neighbors, even as Sherrod admits the two get scrappy in practice “all the time.”

The duo’s grown close since Wetta stepped on campus from Valor Christian three years ago. Wetta found Sherrod intimidating at first, but a breakfast invitation from the Alabama native helped break the ice and was the first step toward what’s grown into a close friendship.

“I just wanted to bridge that connection initially, because I saw a lot of myself in Kindyll, and vice-versa,” Sherrod said. “I knew we both had the same mentality towards basketball and towards life, and I wanted her to see me with the walls down. We’ve really made an effort to get to know each other on a personal level, which helps when we do butt heads on the court in practice. It’s all fun and games and we can laugh about it after, and keep pushing each other, especially on defense.”

Together, Sherrod and Wetta have fueled the Buffs’ stingy defense amid their 16-2 start and No. 3 national ranking.

Colorado guard Jaylyn Sherrod celebrates the win with Kindyll Wetta, left, in Pac-12 women's basketball in Boulder on December 30, 2023. (Cliff Grassmick/Daily Camera)
Colorado guard Jaylyn Sherrod celebrates the win with Kindyll Wetta, left, in Pac-12 women’s basketball in Boulder on December 30, 2023. (Cliff Grassmick/Daily Camera)

CU is averaging 10.8 steals per game and is 13th in the NCAA in steal differential at plus-4.56. Sherrod, the four-year incumbent starter, leads the team with 42 steals. Wetta, CU’s sparkplug off the bench who plays starters’ minutes and is often on the floor with Sherrod in crunch time, is right behind her with 37 steals.

“The majority of jump balls we have is one of us is on the ball, and the other one comes up to double and tie it up,” Wetta said. “Especially in our zone, we’ve learned together to recognize those specific opportunities to make big plays, to get steals and to feed off each other.”

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