Of course, while the twins have both found success in basketball, they haven’t been leading identical careers. Last year, Michelle became the first Edmonton woman to be drafted by the WNBA. She was picked 19th overall by the Seattle Storm, although she didn’t manage to get one of the roster spots during the training camp. She played just nine minutes in one preseason game and turned the ball over four times. In 2012, she played for Canada women’s national basketball team at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.
In the spring, after graduating from their respective alma maters, the 23-year-olds’ careers converged when they were both chosen for Canada’s team for the 2014 FIBA World Championship for Women. For several months, the sisters trained together in Edmonton at the University of Alberta’s Saville Centre and then competed overseas. Their team placed fifth overall. In July 2015, both Plouffe sisters were on the Canadian team that beat the United States 81-73 to claim the country’s first-ever Pan American Games gold medal in women’s basketball. Fittingly, those games were held on home soil in Toronto. The 2014 world championship was the first time in many years that the sisters had played on the same team, but it felt natural. “We have a little bit of twin telepathy,” jokes Katherine. “But we’ve been separated for four years, so now it’s a bit of a weak signal.” Of course, even if the twins don’t actually swap brain waves, they can communicate in a way other players can’t: “On the court, it probably looked like we had some magical powers because we’ve been training together our whole lives,” Katherine adds.
In September 2014, when the FIBA team disbanded, the twins’ careers deviated once again. They joined two different teams in Europe, where women’s basketball is more popular than it is in Canada. Katherine was in Romania playing for pro team ICIM Arad, on the western edge of Transylvania close to the Hungarian border, while Michelle cracked the starting five for one of Europe’s best pro teams, Arras Pays d’Artoisin France. But while they are once again apart – in fact, now farther apart than ever before – their goals are remarkably similar. Michelle says she’d like to go the Olympics again and would like another stab at the WNBA. Katherine, too, would like to make the Olympic team as well as the WNBA. Regardless of what happens, both would like to play ball for as long as they possibly can – hopefully well into their 30s. “It really depends on whether your body holds up and whether you have a chance to play,” says Katherine. But the twins are still young; most women basketball players don’t peak until their late 20s. While young, the twins are pragmatic: the time will eventually come when basketball is no longer an option. When that happens, they plan to go into business, like their big sister, and head back to Canada. “I think we’ll definitely be back in Edmonton. Our family’s there, so it’s a good home base for us, but we don’t know what the future holds.”