Selected as a nominee for the 2003 Sportswoman of the Year Award by the Women?s Sports Foundation (won by swimmer Natalie Coughlin)
Leading scorer for the U.S. national women's volleyball team, which won a silver medal at the 2002 World Championships in Germany
Widely considered one of America?s top women?s volleyball players who possesses amazing power and grace
Awarded 2001-02 AVCA National Player of the Year honors, finishing her Stanford career as the all-time leader with 1,939 career kills
Played a near-perfect match to give the Stanford Cardinal its fifth championship NCAA championship in ?01 Continues to study towards her International Relations degree at Stanford
Only high school player to compete for U.S. National Team, then at age 19, she started in the Olympics, helping the U.S. to fourth place.
Was the youngest member of the 1996 U.S. Junior National Team (16 years old) but still led the team in blocks and kills Featured as a 1997 Old Spice Athlete of the Month in Sports Illustrated
Has been featured on ESPN's "Scholastic Sports America"
Her father, Melvyn, was an all-star athlete in Hawaii who went on to play football at San Jose State and the Philadelphia Eagles, and now lives on the Big Island
--usoc.org
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