Sophia Vital mesmerized Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School basketball fans for two years with her point guard prowess, maneuvering through any defense that came her way with an unmatched flair. A half decade later, sheโ€™ll get a chance to show the game that wowed Cambridge residents on the national stage.

A junior guard on the University of Rhode Island womenโ€™s basketball team, Vital and her Atlantic 10 Conference Champion Rams are the 11th seed in the Fort Worth regional. The Rams will play 6th seed Alabama in the NCAA Tournamentโ€™s opening round March 21.

โ€œIโ€™m really excited to play. To be honest, itโ€™s a really great opportunity for our team,โ€ Vital said. โ€œWe had a big win against [North Carolina] State earlier in the year โ€ฆ We get to go in, play and prove to other teams that we can compete with them, so thatโ€™s pretty cool.โ€

Averaging career bests in scoring (7.7 points per game), rebounding (5.5) and steals (nearly 2) to go with 3.6 assists, Vital helped Rhode Island (28-4, 16-2) win the Atlantic 10 Conference championship and earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament after winning the leagueโ€™s regular season crown. Vital earned an All-Conference Second Team nod along the way.

At 5-foot-3, Vital is almost always the shortest player on the court. Itโ€™s been that way for as long as she can remember, but that never deterred college coaches from recruiting her, especially URIโ€™s Tammy Reiss.

Sophia Vital is introduced before the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament championship game March 8, 2026. Credit: Enzo Zambito / Rhode Island athletics

URIโ€™s coach since 2019, Reiss noted the long list of small point guards who dominated the college level, including her own former college teammate Dawn Staley, the legendary player and current coach of powerhouse South Carolina.

Reiss said Vital โ€œhas the heart of a lion.โ€ Sheโ€™s also got a lightning-quick first step and plays creatively.

โ€œWhen you have a kid that competes that hard and is that good, I never worry about size,โ€ Reiss. โ€œWhen you play large, your size doesnโ€™t matter.โ€

Vital starred at CRLS for two years, as a sophomore leading the Falcons to the 2020 Dual County League Division 1 North title game for the first time in nearly two decades. She also earned Boston Globe All-Scholastic Super Team honors. Vitalโ€™s oldest sister Celina played on the 2002 CRLS state title team. Two other siblings also played for the school.

Reece Freeman took the reins as CRLS varsity head coach during Vitalโ€™s freshman year. Now in his seventh season, Freeman looks back fondly at Vitalโ€™s time with the school. Everyone around Cambridge heard about her coming in.

โ€œDespite knowing that she was going to be pretty brilliant, itโ€™s still crazy to see [someone] at her height with her ability,โ€ Freeman said. โ€œWomenโ€™s basketball has taken an extreme jump, even from then. To see what she was doing at that time was amazing.โ€

โ€œWe were always in awe of stuff that she was doing.โ€

She transferred to Tabor Academy in Marion and reclassified, repeating 10th grade. Tabor Academy competes in the top league of the New England Preparatory School Athletic Council (NEPSAC), a large step up in competition from the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA). There, as a boarding student, she helped the Seawolves to a league championship and won league MVP honors.

โ€œIt was really hard for me because all my friends and a lot of my family are still in Cambridge,โ€ Vital said, โ€œit was a really hard transition, but it worked out for me.โ€

URI coach Tammi Reiss began recruiting Vital not long after she transferred to Tabor Academy. While itโ€™s hard for college coaches to attend the majority of a prospective playersโ€™ high school games during their own busy season, Reiss did everything she could to secure what she saw as her teamโ€™s future standout point guard.

Reiss sat courtside at every one of Vitalโ€™s Bay State Jaguars AAU games for two straight summers. When Vital began official college visits, Reiss penned a long, handwritten letter outlining all the reasons why URI fit.

โ€œIt was imperative that we get her to our program,โ€ Reiss said. โ€œWe were blessed and lucky enough that she wanted to stay close to home.โ€

As a URI freshman, Vital appeared in 24 games off the bench. She started 24 of 34 games as a sophomore last year. Her growth coincides with that of the program itself, which improved from 10 to 11 to 16 conference wins over that same span.

Reiss predicted a breakout season for Vital, who stayed on campus for both summer sessions. They trained her finishing package, 3-point shooting, and most importantly, Reiss said, being a point guard and the leader of the team.

โ€œI knew it was going to pay huge dividends,โ€ Reiss said. โ€œShe controlled both sides of the ball and became our leader.โ€

A lot of that leadership, Vital said, started at CRLS, where she was the teamโ€™s engine from day one.

Had the Rams lost in its conference tournament, its postseason status wouldโ€™ve been left to the selection committee. It received seven votes in the most recent AP Top 25 Womenโ€™s College Basketball Poll and wouldโ€™ve been right on the bubble for an at-large selection.

Sophia Vital and teammates celebrate their Atlantic-10 conference championship. Credit: Enzo Zambito / Rhode Island athletics

But top-seeded URI knocked off seeds 8, 4 and 2 in consecutive days at the Henrico Sports & Events Center in Glen Allen, Va., winning the automatic conference bid for its first NCAA tournament in 30 years, and only its second ever. Vital believes they have what it takes to advance beyond the opening round.

โ€œI think weโ€™re going to do really well in the tournament,โ€ Vital said. โ€œMy team is super competitive and really wants to prove that we can compete with these teams. Weโ€™re going to take it one game at a time but want to go far.โ€

A stronger

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