Ohio State Career
- Captain as a senior
- Three-time Ohio State Scholar-Athlete
- USFCA Scholar of Distinction (2023, '24)
- 2024 and '25 Academic All-Big Ten
- Transferred to Ohio State after one year at NYU
2024-25 (Senior Season)
- Sixth at OSU Open
- Finished 19th at CCFC individual championships
- 8-5 in dual bouts; competed in six of seven events (did not compete at Northwestern)
- Picked up a win at CCFC team championships to help Buckeyes to women's team and foil titles
- Academic All-Big Ten and Ohio State Scholar-Athlete honoree
2023-24 (Junior Season)
- Placed 16th at CCFC Championships
- Finished 12th at OSU Open and 30th at Penn State
- 6-4 in dual events, with five wins in OSU Duals
- Earned USFCA Scholar of Distinction, Academic All-Big Ten and Ohio State Scholar-Athlete honors
2022-23 (Sophomore Season)
- 10-6 in dual matches
- 19th at CCFC individual championships
- Placed 29th at OSU Open and was 7-2 in OSU Dual
- Buckeye women claimed CCFC team and foil squad titles
- An Ohio State Scholar-Athlete and USFCA Scholar of Distinction
Prior to Ohio State
- Competed at NYU in 2021-22
- At NYU (2021-22): Named to Dean’s Honor list in Spring; Recipient of two French Awards for hard work and contributing to the classroom and learning; Recipient of the Josh Goldfaden Award, which commends students for their outstanding contributions to building a community of readers and writers at New York University
- Trained with Cyrano’s Place (2012-17), Two Ravens Fencing School (2017-present) and Premier Fencing Club (2018-21)
- NJSIAA women’s foil champion in 2019
- Two-year high school team captain
- Finance major
- Plans to be an entertainment lawyer working in the Manhattan or Los Angeles area
- Hobbies include lifting, baking, reading, watching movies, fashion, listening to true crime podcasts and keeping up to date on business as an avid reader of the Wall Street Journal
- In the pursuit of being a pop culture know-it-all, watched over 60 classic American films in Summer 2022
- On how she got into fencing “I started fencing because I was given a Wii gaming console for Christmas and one of the sports games is Swordplay. I played relentlessly for months and my parents enrolled me in my first fencing class in Cleveland, Ohio.”