Across her four years at the university and 93 NCAA games, she finished second in program history in minutes played, saves, and wins.
[3] When the National Women's Hockey League (NWHL) was formed in 2015, she signed her first professional contract with the Buffalo Beauts.
[4] She would only play two games for the team during the 2015-16 NWHL season, however, before choosing to take a year away from hockey to focus on her architectural career.
[8] She spoke out publicly about having had to pay to play professional hockey, her $2,500 salary not enough to cover the cost of equipment and travel after taxes, and about her frustrations with trying to convince people that she was a professional athlete, adding that she didn't want to be a "role model for multi-tasking" due to having to work two jobs.
[10] She was chosen as one of the players to accompany the PWHPA in a Dream Gap Tour showcase in Tokyo, Japan, in March 2020 before the season was halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.