Tolefree patiently waiting for draft night

Alexis Tolefree attempts a jumpshot in Arkansas' 91-41 win over Tulsa on Wednesday Dec. 11, 2019 at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville. Tolefree is hoping to hear her name called Friday night during the WNBA draft.

— Former Arkansas guard Alexis Tolefree is among those hoping her phone rings Friday when all three rounds of the WNBA Draft will be aired on ESPN at 6 p.m.

Twelve WNBA teams will select a combined 36 players in the draft, which takes place while the WNBA is shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic. ESPNW ranked Tolefree the No. 22 prospect in the draft earlier this week.

"To see my name at No. 22, that was big for me," Tolefree said. "I never really imagined myself being in that spot. You dream about it, but once it's finally here it's like a dream come true."

Razorbacks in WNBA Draft

Alexis Tolefree is looking to become Arkansas' seventh player drafted by the WNBA, which began its draft in 1997. Here is a look at the six other Razorbacks who have been drafted.

Name, Year, Round-Overall

Christy Smith, 1998, 2-17

Shaka Massey, 2000, 4-59

Dana Cherry, 2003, 2-23

Shameka Christon, 2004, 1-5

Lauren Ervin, 2008, 3-37

C'eira Ricketts, 2012, 2-24

Tolefree's final year at Arkansas included All-SEC first-team honors. She averaged 16.3 points, shot 40 percent from 3-point range and she helped lead the Razorbacks to their first ranking in the final Associated Press Top 25 poll since 2003. 

One knock on Tolefree (5-8) leading up to the draft has been her size. ESPN women's college basketball analyst Charlie Creme wrote, "size and strength are question marks."

"Obviously her physical strength and size is going to be a question and people tried to take advantage of her this year," Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors said. "Well, we're just going to post Tolefree up. OK, let me know how that works out for you."

Tolefree was the Razorbacks' second-leading rebounder in SEC play, averaging five rebounds per game. Tolefree's strengths are what she believes the WNBA wants. 

"I think the WNBA likes scorers and I feel like me being able to score at all three levels is big," she said. "I can get to the rim, I can pass, I can shoot the three, I can shoot a pull-up, I can get to the line. I think that is a big strength that all coaches love to see."

"It was a tough, tough matchup for teams to try and decide how they are going to guard her," Neighbors said. "It's one thing to show a kid on film, 'Hey, you're going to have to guard Alexis Tolefree at 30 feet,' but it's another thing to realize where that actually is on the floor." 

Neighbors also praised her defense and ability to get her hands on the ball, as well as her locker room presence. 

"She's a great locker-room kid. She's a great teammate," he said. "When they're drafting in the WNBA they're not really drafting starters. They've got a roster full of those. There are only 11 spots on 12 teams, so it is a hard job market to break in to. I've been telling (teams) that this is a kid that in your locker room is going to be great. She's going to fit right in with the biggest stars, and she's going to fit in with the rookies."

Tolefree has found a small church gym to continue getting shots up since the University of Arkansas closed down last month. She has also been working on the mental side of her game. 

"There is no training camp. I can't send videos or anything, so it's really just been me waiting patiently," she said. "Talking back and forth with my agent, seeing what she has to say, but really it's just me waiting and waiting."

Playing professional basketball has always been a goal for Tolefree. 

"I want (my family) to be able to explore the world someday, and I want to make that happen for them and for myself," Tolefree said.

"I would tell you that less than half the people we recruit actually have professional basketball dreams," Neighbors said. "Lex is one that knew she wanted to play for as long as she could."

Tolefree was a star at Conway High School, where she played in three state title games and won one. But coming out of high school her prospects were limited. After signing with the University of Central Arkansas, Tolefree decided to leave Conway and play at Jones County (Miss.) Junior College.

After two standout years in junior college, Tolefree received offers from Missouri, Baylor, LSU, Mississippi State, Ole Miss and, in her words, pretty much everybody in the SEC except for South Carolina.

Tolefree started 36 of 37 games for Arkansas during her junior season, when she averaged 10.2 points per game.

"She didn't have a junior year like she wanted," Neighbors said. "She took coaching and said, 'OK, I can do that.' She came back and I think she obviously had a legacy-leaving year."

Tolefree has a backup plan if the WNBA doesn't call Friday.

"We're also talking about teams overseas," she said, about "where I would like to end up, where I would like to go play.

"I don't like being cold, so somewhere warm. That's all I ask."