JMU won out, but Gaudian didn’t decide on the Dukes until January of her junior year at Lake Braddock. It was early, but she was one of the last from her Capital team to commit.
“A big aspect of it was, in my area, private schools were more prominent, and you got more looks if you went to private school,” Gaudian said. “I think me going to public school was a little step behind everyone else. I did have other offers, but I just wanted to be as patient as I possibly could because I always heard that people that committed first were the unhappiest. I think that I really wanted to make the best decision to be somewhere I knew I’d be happy all four years.”
She had cousins who played for the North Carolina men’s team and for the Virginia Tech women’s team, but she followed her aunt, Cathy Gaudian, and came to JMU, even though they couldn’t offer her more than their final roster spot.
“It was just so late,” Klaes-Bawcombe said. “She was the 10th recruit. At this point, we’d exhausted all of our athletic aid. It was really just looking at the spots we had left on our roster. I thought she was somebody that might be able to help us. It was just so late in the process that I could only offer a spot on the roster.
“I knew she was a big strong athlete that had a nose for the goal,” she added. “She was somebody who was not afraid to take on numbers. She really wanted to go to goal. I valued that fearlessness in her and the risk-taking that she showed and felt like, if she was showing this kind of speed and power as a high school athlete, what could she do as a woman in the college game?"
Gaudian’s statistics have improved each season. She saw action as a freshman and sophomore, but didn’t really put up major numbers until last year.
“I think I came in and expected to do a lot,” Gaudian said. “But then I was not really doing anything because I was trying to do everything. As I got older, got more experience, gained a little more lacrosse IQ and matured a little bit on the field, that’s where my success started coming up. We had pretty incredible players my first couple years here that helped me grow my game because I was playing alongside them. That’s a big reason I’ve continued to grow every year so far.”
As a junior Gaudian had 60 points to quintuple her total from the year before, and she’s built on that this season.
“She’s optimized her potential, maximized her potential,” Klaes-Bawcombe said. “When I remember watching her play for Capital, she would get the draw and she would go down and score or at least get a shot. That is who she has become at the college level, but there were so many aspects of her game that needed to develop for her to get to this point.
“As a younger player, maybe she didn’t understand when to pass out of her dodge or when to pull out of her dodge so they would be charges. She might not have a sense of her feet underneath her to slow down and get a little more balance before she took a shot and it was just a high-to-high shot right at the goalie. Her composure level, her balance and coordination and her ability to slow the moment down has all come to her now. She’s a woman among girls out there. Her wrist control, her strength in her wrists, allows her to finish big plays on the draw, on ground balls and around the net. She’s just able to hold off a tremendous amount of defensive pressure and still make the play because of her strength.”