Beyer holds the UHSP career, season, and single-game records for points, field goals, free throws and assists.
[2] In her youth, she practiced her skills at her local YMCA and developed toughness playing against her older brothers Brian and Daniel at home in the driveway.
[1] His self-medication management began to overwhelm him, leading to her to assist as a caregiver, which required that she learn about the interactions of medicines.
[3] As a freshman, she helped Mukwonago reach the 2016 Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) Division 1 championship game, where they lost 52–46 to Verona.
[11][12] The NCAA Division I coaches that had recruited her since the seventh grade, lost interest as she insisted on balancing a scientific curriculum with her athletics.
[3] She got the impression that most felt that science classes with lab hours would make it difficult to fully commit to basketball.
[2] After three straight runnerup finishes, Mukwonago earned the number one seed in 2019 with Beyer entering the state tournament with averages of 13.6 points and 5.7 rebounds per game.
[9] 16 points by Beyer in the semifinal against Middleton High School was not enough to earn a fourth consecutive championship game appearance.
[2] On January 4, 2021, Beyer became UHSP's first 40-point scorer when her 40 points surpassed Emi Santhuff's 2014 38-point single-game record performance.
[20] On February 4, Beyer pushed her single-season points total to 471, surpassing the 2004 school record of 445 set by Chrissi Glastetter.
[24] The team achieved a school record 11 wins, while Beyer led the AMC in scoring with 28.7 average.
She eclipsed the career scoring record of 1,263 held by assistant coach Morgan Rose since 2019 on December 4, reaching 1282 on that day.
[27] As a junior, she became the first Academic All-America selection in University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis history when she earned recognition by the College Sports Information Directors of America as the 2022 NAIA Women's Basketball Academic All-America Team Member of the Year after posting 1,019 points with per game averages of 32.9 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.2 assists.
[47][48] On Senior day,[26] Beyer broke a tie with Walker-Samuels at 3,855 with a three point shot as part of a 32-point performance against Hannibal–LaGrange University.
[49] Beyer earned recognition for a third time as a 2024 First-Team All-AMC selection and the AMC Player of the Year honoree.
[50] On March 2, Beyer posted 33 in her final game, which was the semifinals of the 2024 American Midwest Conference Tournament against Columbia College, while Clark was chasing her 3,961-point total with 3,650 points.
[53] At the conclusion of her career, she finished second among women in college basketball scoring behind Pearl Moore (AIAW Francis Marion/Anderson Junior College, 4,061) and fifth regardless of sex behind John Pierce (NAIA David Lipscomb, 4,230 points), Philip Hutcheson (Lipscomb, 4,106), and Travis Grant (NCAA Division II Kentucky State, 4,045).
[49] When Byer's season ended on March 2, Clark's 2023–24 Iowa Hawkeyes team still had its Senior day game against Ohio State, the 2024 Big Ten women's basketball tournament and a likely invitation to the 2024 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament to wait for.