GeAnna Luaulu-Summers enters her senior year with 834 points. She is eight on the all-time assists list of 272, and third in free throw percentage at .804.
2016-17 (Junior):
A First Team All-West Coast Conference selection, she played in 28 games, starting each. Led the Tigers with 14.5 points per game, sixth in the WCC. She scored in double-figures in 24 of 28 games, with five games scoring 20+ points. Her 2.0 assist-to-turnover ratio was second in the WCC. Finished sixth in the WCC in assists (4.4 per game), free throw percentage at .833 (110-of-132), steals (1.8 per game), three-pointers (2.0 made per game). Posted two double-doubles on the year, including a triple-double against UC Merced (Nov. 13), which was the second triple-double in program history as she scored 17 points with 11 assists and 11 rebounds (also added seven steals), which earned her WCC Player of the Week honors. Also posted a double-double with 14 points and 10 assists at San Jose State (Nov. 18). Scored in double-figures in 13-straight games from Jan. 14 to Feb. 25. Set a program record for most free throws made in a game without a miss, going 16-for-16 against San Francisco (Jan. 14). Scored a season-high of 22 points against Saint Mary''s (Jan. 18) as she hit five three-pointers.
2015-16 (Sophomore):
GeAnna Luaulu-Summers played in 26 games, starting 24. Led the West Coast Conference in assist-to-turnover ration (2.3) while averaging 10.3 points (24th in WCC) and 4.1 assists per game (4th in WCC). She ranked fourth in the WCC in free throw percentage at .816 (71-of-87). Hit double-figures in scoring in 13 of 24 starts. Posted one double-double, in which she handed out 10 assists and scored 37 points at Gardner-Webb (Nov. 28). The 37 points were fourth in a single-game in Pacific history, as she hit 19-of-22 from the free throw line (Pacific records for makes and attempts). Earned WCC Player of the Week honors following the Gardner-Webb explosion, having scored 11 points with three assists earlier in the week in a win at North Carolina. Scored (then career-high) 19 points with a career-high nine rebounds and five assists against Cal State Bakersfield (Nov. 13). Handed out five or more assists in a game 10 times in 26 games. Scored 16 points with eight assists against Pepperdine (Feb. 13). Added eight assists against San Francisco (Dec. 23) and Pepperdine (WCC Quarterfinals, Mar. 3). Scored 21 points at Saint Mary’s, on 7-of-12 shooting. Hit 33 three-pointers on the year, including three in a game four times.
2014-15 (Freshman):
A 2015 West Coast Conference All-Freshman Team selection, Luaulu-Summers played in 28 of 31 games and averaged 5.8 points in 16.6 minutes per contest. Posted six games in double-figure scoring, including a career-best 18 points at BYU (Jan. 15) on 6-of-8 shooting, all from three-point range with a career-best four assists. Added 13 points against Gonzaga (Jan. 24) and tallied 11 points in three games, at San Francisco (Dec. 27), Loyola Marymount (Jan. 1) and at Portland (Feb. 19). She posted a career-best three steals in a game four times and connected three times from three-point range in a game on four separate occasions. Created four and-one opportunities on the season.
High School:
GeAnna Luaulu-Summers, a 5-9 guard out of Sacred Heart Cathedral in San Francisco was a First Team All-State selection in Division III as a senior and WCAL Player of the Year. She was also named the WCAL Player of the Year as a junior, when she also earned All-WCAL and All-City First Team honors, while averring 15.5 points, 5.7 rebounds and 4.5 assists per game.
In 2011-12, as a sophomore, she started at point guard and led Sacred Heart Cathedral in scoring with 13.5 points per game. She also led the Fighting Irish to a second-straight CCS Division III Championship. Luaulu-Summers was the starting point guard for the varsity team as a freshman in 2010-11, leading the team in scoring and earning Second Team All-WCAL and All-City honors.
Personal:
GeAnna is the daughter of Gene Summers and Lisa Luaulu. In high school, she went by Summers-Luaulu.