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Morgan Burchhardt

Explore CDSWOY All-Time Roster Members

Addyson Galuski’s resume is already impressively full: State champion, all-state athlete, leading scorer in Waterford-Halfmoon girls’ soccer history.
The best word to describe Amanda Chambers, a member of the UAlbany cross country and track & field teams, is perseverance.
Amber Kolpakas has led the Golden Eagles on the volleyball court since she was in eighth grade. “I had always been interested in volleyball,” Kolpakas said. “I joined my school’s team in sixth grade and was asked to play JV the next year. By the end of seventh grade, I was pulled up to varsity for sectionals.”
Amelia Canetto, a senior at Taconic Hills, combined all that throughout her high school career, which saw her star athletically, achieve academically and make her mark within her community.
After four years playing field hockey at Lock Haven University, Amy Stevens transferred to Russell Sage College as a graduate for the 2023 season. Though playing for the Gators only for one year, everyone in and out of the program can agree that Stevens made an outsized impact on the Russell Sage field hockey team.
During her career at Averill Park High School, Anna Jankovic stood out with her athletic and academic achievements, but it was the way she treated others that impressed so many people around her.
Ariana Dingley started playing soccer because she liked doing whatever her older sister was doing. But as she progressed in her career, soccer became something she enjoyed in her own right. Dingley began playing soccer at just five years old and never stopped working on her craft. She would go on to star for Lansingburgh and was twice named Section 2 Class B Colonial Council All-Stars First Team and was honorable mention two more times in four years with the Knights.

Katie Pascale

2024 Grand Collegiate Woman of the Year
  • Class:

    2024

  • Sport(s):

    Collegiate

  • Induction:

    2024

Written by Harrison Huntley

Most women’s lacrosse sticks are between 3 and 3.5 feet tall. Katie Pascale says lacrosse has been a part of her life since her stick was taller than she was.

“When I was in Kindergarten, I went to my first lacrosse camp,” Pascale said. “The stick just never fell out of my hand.”

In high school at Baldwinsviile, Pascale was the MVP of the 2019 lacrosse team that won sectional and regional championships. But as several of Pascale’s teammates all went their separate ways to play NCAA Division I lacrosse, she turned down Power Five offers to play at UAlbany.

“I saw plenty of ACC schools and bigger programs,” Pascale said. “There was just something intimate and family-like about UAlbany. I knew on my first visit to UAlbany that it was where I wanted to be.”

All Pascale did in college was rewrite the UAlbany record book. She is the only women’s lacrosse player to ever score 300 career points in her career at UAlbany and one of only five women in the America East Conference to do so. She holds program records in scoring, assists, and draw controls by wide margins.

“She was very highly recruited nationally with many top teams looking at her,” UAlbany head coach Katie Thomson said. “She gave her all and took the program to new heights.”

Pascale was recognized for her efforts as an Inside Lacrosse Preseason and Midseason All-American, a two-time All-America Honorable Mention, a four-time All-Region selection, a two-time America East Midfielder of the Year, and a two-time consecutive America East Scholar-Athlete. The latter award recognizes her play on the field as well as academic achievements. She graduated with a 3.66 cumulative GPA and is the fourth player in program history to earn America East All-Academic honors three times and one of the three to have earned the conference’s Scholar-Athlete honors twice.

When it comes to academics, Pascale credits her mother, a former Syracuse basketball player, and the faculty at UAlbany.

“My mom taught me how to keep my things super organized, which is important in accounting,” Pascale said. “UAlbany also had great professors and a great athletic advising program.

And while her gaudy lacrosse statistics are undoubtedly the product of Pascale’s hard work and determination, she says she couldn’t have done it without her teammates.

“The career points record shows how great the team is,” she said. “I was always an assist-first girl. I’m thankful to have been surrounded by a great team, they made my experience better from the time I was a freshman.”

Pascale said UAlbany became a home away from home for her because of the closeness of her teammates along with the greater Albany community. She worked alongside her teammates to develop local youth lacrosse players through the CityLax program.

“Anything that involves younger kids is awesome,” Pascale said. “I love seeing little kids look up to us and show up to our games. We want to be well known in the community.”

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