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CareerTimeline
Most Notable
- Member of the U.S. Women's Sitting National Team since 2004
- Named "Best Blocker" of the 2016 Paralympic Games and 2024 Paralympic Games
- Member of Team USA's "Best Paralympic Team" in 2016
- Inaugural recipient of USA Volleyball's All-Time Great Female Sitting Volleyball Player Award
- USA Volleyball Sitting Player of the Year in 2007 and 2004
- Named MVP and Best Spiker at the 2003 Parapan American Games
Events
- 2024 Paralympic Games - Gold; Best Blocker
- 2024 World ParaVolley Super 6 - Gold
- 2023 ParaVolley Pan American Zonal Championship - Gold
- 2022 World ParaVolley World Championships - Bronze
- 2021 Golden Nations League - Gold
- 2020 Paralympic Games - Gold
- 2019 Parapan American Games - Gold
- 2018 World ParaVolley World Championships - Silver
- 2016 Paralympic Games - Gold; Best Blocker
- 2016 ParaVolley Intercontinental Cup - Gold
- 2012 Paralympic Games - Silver
- 2010 Parapan American Championship - Gold
- 2008 Paralympic Games - Silver
- 2006 Sitting Volleyball World Championships
- 2004 Paralympic Games - Bronze
Personal Highlights
- Married Paul Bargellini in 2010. Paul played club volleyball for the University of Delaware. The couple has four children. She competed in the Tokyo Games while pregnant with her fourth child.
- Prior to the Tokyo Paralympics, Webster received a $10,000 grant from “the Power of She Fund,” which was set up by the Women’s Sports Foundation and Athleta to help athletes pay for childcare costs.
- Was born in Phoenix. Also lived in Lincoln, Neb., as a teen before graduating from Cactus Shadows HS in Scottsdale, Ariz.
- Now lives in Point Lookout, N.Y. with her family and ran for Hempstead Town Council in 2019
- Uncle Bob Webster has worked with the U.S. Men's and Women's Hockey teams for more than 25 years... Sister Lisa Yost played volleyball for the University of Nebraska - Omaha and the University of Tampa
- At age 11 was diagnosed with osteosarcoma (bone cancer) in her left tibia. Later underwent a procedure known as rotationplasty to remove the cancerous bone, which included the knee. As part of the procedure, her lower leg was rotated 180 degrees and connected to the remnants of the femur. This gave her full range of movement, allowing her to play sports. In 1998, she was fitted with prosthesis.
- In 2004, her high school volleyball team won the state title
- Was honored at the 2004 Gene Autry Courage Awards in Tempe, Ariz.
- In February 2006, she was named Cosmopolitan magazine's first "Fun Fearless Female Reader," winning a $10,000 cash prize