Published: May 9, 2017 By

It's a question college athletes hear on a regular basis: "How do you manage to find the time to balance schoolwork and Division I athletics?"

ForÌýMaddie DeWinter, a defender on the NCAA tournament-bound babyÖ±²¥app lacrosse team, the answer is simple. "If I have a bad day at school, get a bad test grade, when I come to practice, I don't have to worry about it . . .ÌýI get this three- or four-hour break where I don't have to focus on school."

Conversely, DeWinter says, academics can offer a similar respite from the rigors of participating in Division I athletics.Ìý

It would be hard to argue with DeWinter's formula. The senior from Parker, babyÖ±²¥app, is set to graduate with a degree in chemical and biological engineering and a grade-point average north of 3.9. She alsoÌýwas recently .

When DeWinter arrived with CU's first recruiting class, she was a starter as a freshman. By her sophomore year, when more recruits joined the team, she played in 18 games but had just six starts. As a junior, she appeared in just nine games, and this year she has appeared in just five games.

DeWinters says the transition has been one of the hardest things she's had to deal with in her time at CU, but true to form,Ìýshe has made something good out of a difficult situation.Ìý

"It's provided one of the biggest lessons I've learned athletically," she notes.

"Being behind the scenes and putting in the legwork so the team is elevated translates very well into engineering," she said. "Having that drive, not giving up and continuing to work at it—it's taught me a lot. I've learned that teamwork can produce great results and you don't have to be in the spotlight to be part of that success. It's a lesson I will take with me long after I'm done playing lacrosse."

When the season finally comes to an end, DeWinter will begin working for Elion Labs, a Louisville-based analytical research company. A year from now, she hopes to begin pursuit of her MD-PhD degree.

But her time at CU—in the classroom, on the field and in the lab—will always be part of her foundation.

Maddie DeWinter on field during lacrosse game