Hall of Fame
Women’s Basketball (2009-11)
Was named the WAC Newcomer of the Year and earned first-team All-WAC honors in 2010… was a two-time team captain… came to Nevada from Sheridan College after starting her career at Wyoming… finished ninth in the nation in scoring with 22.1 points per game in 2010-11… led Nevada to a school-record 22 wins and the second round of the WNIT in 2011… earned first-team All-WAC, WAC All-Tournament and WBCA All-Region honors that year… became one of twelve of Nevada's 1,000-point scorers, averaging 19.5 points per game in her career… was named one of five finalists for the Sullivan Award, given annually to the nation's top amateur athlete… received her Bachelor of Science Degree in General Studies with emphasis in Health Education, Communication and Native American Studies at Nevada-Reno… became Nevada's first WNBA selection, and the first enrolled full blooded Native American woman drafted in 2011… was taken in the third round by the Phoenix Mercury and then traded to the Connecticut Sun were she played for them overseas before she was released from the roster… played professionally for four seasons in Israel, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Poland and China, but unfortunately suffered from an injury… returned to Nevada as a graduate assistant for the Wolf Pack Women's basketball team and earned her master's degree in the University of Nevada's educational leadership program… was then promoted to the Director of Player Development for the Wolf Pack, making her one of three Native women coaching at the NCAA Division I level… also became a Nike N7 basketball ambassador and served as the national spokeswoman for “Let’s Move! In Indian Country,” a Michelle Obama-led health initiative… also served as the national spokeswoman for Big Brothers & Big Sisters… had been working with the Eastern Shoshone Tribe Special Diabetes department for four years and recently started a position as a middle school teacher in Wyoming.