Career
She is primarily known for an exceptional high school career. She has been called the "Best American High School distance runner of all time." In 1991, she set the American Junior and National High School record in the indoor 3,000 meters. As a child she took up running on her own volition.
By age 10 she was running a hilly 5 mile run daily, timing herself to make herself faster each day.
By age 15 she was a high school phenom. Her 1990 winning time of 16:39, reputed to be by a quarter of a mile, is the still standing Morely Field course record.
She is the first female scholastic athlete to run two miles in less than 10 minutes (9:559). a record she held for 22 years. By the time she reached the University of Oregon on a track scholarship, injuries and an eating disorder prevented her from running for her first two years.
She gave up her scholarship her junior year, only to return to earn it back as a senior, winning the 1996 National Collegiate Athletic Association Championship at 3,000 meters.
In 2000 she made a failed attempt to make the United States Olympic team in the marathon, then disappeared from the scene. At age 37, she decided to give it one more go, training for the 2012 Olympic Trials. While failing to reach that lofty goal, she did finish 8th at the 2012 World Mountain Running Championships and winning the 2010 women"s division of the running version of the Transrockies race.