There are approximately 100 African American and other student-athletes of color this school year at the University of Minnesota. In an occasional series throughout the 2016-17 school and sports year, the
MSR will highlight many of these players.

This week: freshmen basketball players Kehinde and Taiye Bello

Conclusion of a two-part column

Taiye (l) and Kehinde Bello

There are 11 schools among 349 NCAA Division I womenโ€™s college basketball teams with identical twin sisters on their rosters this season. Two of these schools, Minnesota and Army West Point, met last Thursday for the first time ever at Williams Arena. Each squad had a set of identical Black twin sisters, perhaps a first for the Barn.

Rather than a Patty Duke โ€œthey laugh alike, they walk alikeโ€ฆeven talk alikeโ€ experience, each young woman provided her individual insights about twins. What is the stupidest question theyโ€™ve ever been asked?

โ€œAre you twins?โ€ said Kehinde Bello.

โ€œIf she gets hit, do you feel it?โ€ recalled Taiye Bello.

Daizjah Morris said, โ€œA kid asked us once did we need a mirror each morning or did we just look at each other. That was in high school. That probably was the worst question weโ€™ve been asked.โ€

โ€œThat probably was the worst for sure,โ€ agreed Destinee Morris.

The Morris sisters, who play for Army, are Lino Lakes, Minnesota natives, and both are Centennial High School graduates. It was their first time in town last week playing as collegiate hoopsters.

โ€œWe have a lot of family and friends here,โ€ said Destinee. โ€œIt was an awesome opportunity to play against [Gopher guard] Carlie Wagner. We played against Kenisha Bell in AAU for multiple years. Allina Starr played in the same [AAU] program.โ€

The Bello sisters, the Gophersโ€™ first Black female twins, are from Southfield, Michigan. โ€œBesides the basketball program, I like the academics, the surrounding city,โ€ explained Taiye. Kehinde added that the โ€œsecond familyโ€ atmosphere attracted her to the school. Both of them said that being here will offer them future possibilities as well.

โ€œThere will be a lot of job opportunities in this metropolitan area after I graduate,โ€ predicted Taiye.

โ€œYou canโ€™t play basketball forever,โ€ noted Kehinde.

Our second question was if the twins were โ€œboth or noneโ€ package deals during the recruiting process.

โ€œWe knew before the recruiting process started during high school that we wanted to go to college together,โ€ said Destinee Morris. โ€œSchools that were only recruiting one of us, we told them to either stop recruiting us or recruit the both of us. We have been playing together since fourth grade, and we knew we wanted to finish out our run together.โ€

โ€œDestinee was more on board about Army than I was,โ€ recalled Daizjah Morris. โ€œThen I did more research and she started telling me things about the school that I didnโ€™t know. Now that we are here, we both honestly can say we couldnโ€™t be anywhere else.โ€

Destinee (l) and Daizjah Morris

Taiye Bello replied, โ€œI know I wanted to go to school with her if I could. But if it came down to it that we couldnโ€™t go to school together, weโ€™d just go our separate ways. There were only a couple of schools that were recruiting only one of us.โ€

Now juniors, the Morris sisters both have another year before they start their expected military commitment after graduation. โ€œI plan to go to med school following West Point,โ€ said Destinee, a life science major. โ€œAfter I go to med school, I will enter the Army as an Army doctor.โ€

Said Daizjah, an engineering major, โ€œWe donโ€™t know our branches yet on where we will spend our five years of commitment. I plan to either go into engineering management or business, depending on where the Army takes me.โ€

The Bello sisters havenโ€™t yet decided on their majors. โ€œI thought college would be super hard,โ€ said Taiye. Kehinde added that college is โ€œa step upโ€ from their high school advanced classes.

Both sisters shared their favorite guilty pleasure: Taiyeโ€™s favorite television show is Greyโ€™s Anatomy. โ€œItโ€™s one of those shows I really follow. I just love that show.โ€  For Kehinde, โ€œGame of Thrones is the best show I watch.โ€

But the two easily agree on one thing: โ€œI really miss my momโ€™s cooking,โ€ admitted Kehinde.  โ€œOh, my God, thereโ€™s nothing like your momโ€™s cooking.โ€

The Bello sisters described one more agreement: โ€œI think me and Taiye will be successful,โ€ said Kehinde. โ€œWe are a pretty awesome team.โ€

Charles Hallman welcomes reader responses to challman@spokesman-recorder.com.