Queen’s basketball player Kiyara Letlow combines on-court excellence with academic purpose
Kiyara Letlow’s university basketball career has been defined by growth in her game, her leadership and her understanding of sport beyond the court.
Now completing her final season with the Queen’s Gaels, the Toronto-born player has combined on-court excellence with academic ambition, emerging as one of the most accomplished rebounders in U SPORTS.
Letlow began playing organized basketball as a teenager and quickly found herself drawn to the learning process.
“I liked playing. I liked learning about the game,” she said.
“I liked seeing myself get better.”
That curiosity and commitment guided her through the prep circuit and into university basketball, even as she navigated unfamiliar systems and competitive environments. By her Grade 10 and 11 years, she began to envision continuing the sport beyond high school.
“I was learning about the game, and we were having success,” she said.
“I could see myself taking it past high school.”
Her recruitment process included multiple university visits, eventually leading her to Cape Breton, where development stood out immediately.
“One of the first things the coach said was, ‘You’re good, but you’re not good enough,’” Letlow said.
“I liked that. I liked that it was about development.”
The fit felt instinctive.
“As soon as I got there, I felt like I had to be there,” she said.
“You just know.”
Letlow arrived at Cape Breton during the COVID-19 pandemic, a period that reshaped her development. While competition was paused, training intensified.
“There were about seven of us,” she said.
“We trained for hours a day, five days a week. No games, just getting better.”
That stretch proved transformative. Still early in her basketball career, Letlow absorbed terminology, defensive concepts and positional details that accelerated her growth.
“When I came back my rookie year, I was way better than I had ever been,” she said.
“I had learned so much about the game.”
From the outset of her U SPORTS career, Letlow leaned into rebounding, an area that became both her foundation and her calling.
“I’ve always been good at rebounding,” she said.
“That turned into offense for me.”
That consistency carried through her years at Cape Breton, where she experienced both success and adversity, including a near championship run in her first season.
“A lot of lessons learned,” she said.
After completing her undergraduate degree in honours psychology, Letlow faced another pivotal decision. With one year of eligibility remaining and limited academic options aligned with her graduate goals, she sought a new challenge.
The opportunity to pursue a master’s degree, return closer to home and join a program whose style she admired led her to Queen’s.
“It was overwhelming at first,” she said.
“New system, new terminology, new environment.”
Support from coaches and teammates helped ease the adjustment.
“They’ve never made it more difficult,” Letlow said.
“I’ve been really supported.”
That support became especially meaningful when Letlow broke the U SPORTS rebounding record during her season with the Gaels. Rather than focusing on the individual milestone, she remembers the team response.
“They were spraying me with water,” she said.
“They really celebrated me.”
Off the court, Letlow is completing a master’s degree in sport psychology. Her research is rooted in both academic inquiry and lived experience. As a mixed-race athlete, she said stereotypes can create an added layer of pressure within competition, shaping how athletes are perceived by coaches, officials, fans and media. Her thesis examines the prevalence of racial stereotypes in sport and how they affect Black and biracial athletes, with a particular focus on women, a group she notes is significantly underrepresented in existing research.
“Sometimes it feels like you’re playing against another barrier,” Letlow said.
“Not just the opponent.”
The work is deeply personal and driven by a desire to create meaningful change within sport.
“I wanted to do something impactful,” she said.
“Something that could make people question how they label athletes.”
As her U SPORTS career comes to a close, Letlow is looking ahead to professional opportunities overseas, embracing the same mindset that has guided her development throughout her journey.
“I’m excited,” she said.
“It’s bittersweet, but I’m ready for what’s next.”
