 Our third inductee is Jamie Elwood. Jamie played for the Women's Lacrosse program from 1998 to 2001 and totaled 45 goals and 18 assists. As a junior, she picked up 79 ground balls and the Mustangs won 27 games over her four seasons. Jamie also played soccer as a freshman and sophomore. So when I think about Jamie, I think about it's hard to narrow down to one thing because she was so athletic, but she was also a great leader. So she was a two-year captain. And in those days, when she was a player here and I was the coach here, we were all part-time coaches. And so I really relied on captains to be the communicators between the athletes on campus all day and me who came in for practice basically because my husband and I were also running a business. So I was stretched in a lot of directions and Jamie fulfilled that job like no other. So I would say leadership number one. She was one of the players who was the foundation of what Stevenson Women's Lacrosse has become. And that's why we wanted her in the Hall of Fame because she, everybody just realizes Jamie was the player who got us that, got us known, got us some recognition. You know, she was someone who came to us and could have played at a higher level but chose to stay with us and we loved that about her. But she was just really a good player and a very dedicated player. She was dedicated to Bill Julie College. She could use both hands on the field. She was fast. She was a hard worker. She was determined on the field. So if you had the ball and she was your defender, you probably should watch out for her chasing you down. She's probably going to take that ball away from you. And she was really good at communicating with the rest of the team on the field as far as keeping people up, directing, telling people where they needed to be, keeping them in the game, keeping their heads up. And just was all over, just really good. She was a two-time most valuable player in her junior and senior years as well. And that just describes her to a tee. The leadership role and then those most valuable player awards. That was Jamie Hurster on the field. From the class of 2001, it is my honor to welcome Jamie Elwood into the Dick Watts Athletics Hall of Fame. Thank you so much, MC, for that amazing introduction. First, I'd really just like to thank all the inductees tonight to the Dick Watts Stevenson University Hall of Fame. I'd like to congratulate them and thank all the members of the committee for this tremendous honor. I feel like I'm among a bunch of amazing athletes. That was just really nice to watch. It's not exactly necessarily how I reflect on my career here. But I really appreciate that great honor and I'm humbled to be recognized among so many talented people tonight. I'd like to thank a few people in particular from the school who have put either a great deal of effort into this amazing event tonight that has really blown me away, exceeded my expectations or who have been very influential in my life. And that is Brett Adams, Mary Claire McFadden, obviously. Paul Canterby, thank you so much for everything. And I'd also like to thank Dr. Kevin Manning and Chip Rouse in particular who I've kept in touch with long after graduating and really appreciate all of your support. So I was unable to make the homecoming game today with my fellow inductees, which I was disappointed at. But I'm sure it was a tremendous experience to go to a sold out football game. That's not exactly something that we did here back in 1998 at Villa Julie College. So I really wanted to go, but even though that's something I couldn't imagine, I spent my entire day kind of running around from soccer field to soccer field. My oldest daughter ran in the state, cross country, middle school, meet today. So even though I'm usually the one running around supporting them, I just wanted to first thank them for coming out to support me tonight. My husband Brett and my three girls, Maya, Marin and Marley, who are all lacrosse players and a couple of soccer players and runners. So C-Mommy really did play lacrosse in college. They can probably believe it now because I don't think they did before tonight. So thank you for that too. They can tell you that the values I learned here at Stevens University are still the values that I instill in them today. You work hard and you study hard. Like a lot of people have already spoken about tonight. We were students first, athletes second, but athletics were such a part of our foundation and we were so supported in that and it was just a great experience. So work hard, study hard and most importantly be a team player and have fun, that's what's important. So that's what I try to instill in my children and I learned a lot of that here from Stevenson. I also want to thank the rest of my family who came out tonight, my parents who maybe only missed a handful of every college game in my career and my brother who also played soccer in college and my sister-in-law of just a year. I also have two dear friends here to support me, my best friend and her husband who's actually a professor here at the University. Shout out to you. So when I was a senior in high school kind of making my decision on where to go to school, like a lot of members have already inductees have talked about tonight. You know I had some other options and I'm so grateful that I chose Villa Jolie College now Stevenson University. I still can't get quite used to that but you know back then it was like a small unknown school. I would tell people where I went maybe like that all women's college, you know, Villa Jolie, what's that? But to me it was almost more exciting than playing for a D1 school. You were on the ground floor. I was close to home which was something that was important to me to be near my family and I could also chase my boyfriend that's now my husband of 15 years. So worked out, worked out for all of us. So Villa Jolie back in the late 90s, early 2000s was just at the beginning of what has been an exciting transformation to the bustling and amazing university that it has now become. When I played soccer in the cross here we only had one part of the NCAA Division III for like a handful of years. MC as she mentioned in the video was part-time making the hustle back and forth down from her business coming to practice, you know, trying to get there and we had a great partnership I think and I'm really grateful that this whole process has kind of brought us back together as well. But she had the drive and the commitment also as a coach for us to be the best team we could be regardless of the talent that we had and you know that was something that I was really proud to be a part of and I was proud to be a part of the early stages of this university that is just now thriving. I remember when I did a tour, believe my mom was there with Matt Biederman who was the soccer coach at the time who kind of recruited me in and he had all these plans and there was I remember being so impressed by the giant washer and dryer that was going to like do our uniforms and everything and it was all going to be laid out and you know, not everything that he promised came to fruition in my four years here. You know, we shared that one field which was pretty cool actually especially with MC as your coach because she would give up field rights to the men's team any day of the week, she wanted the gym 7 a.m. Suicides. She didn't really care about the field so much so I'm glad to see this tradition continues with your role here. So even when we didn't always have the talent we had the heart, that's what I would like to say about our teams at Villa Jolie College and you know we had the talent too but it was the building years so that's the kind of player I was that's what I tried to be. I wasn't the most skilled or advanced player either but I always gave 110% on the field until the last minute of the game and I enjoyed every minute of it. I also was a defender so I like to build the team, build from the back, right? Defense wins championships, just saying. So again just want to thank you for this tremendous honor I'll always be proud to be a Mustang and I look forward to watching the university continue to grow in advance under new leadership and I'm glad that I played a very very small part of building that foundation from where it is today and where it's come and where it's going so thank you so much.