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Brooke Stonehouse with Family
The Stonehouse Family: Josh, Jack, Jessie, Brooke, Sue, John. A two-time Academic All-MAC honoree, Brooke is graduating with a degree in business management and marketing this May.

Brooke Stonehouse Learned How to Balance Athletics, Academics and Life

Rocket soccer player will graduate this spring but is not slowing down

3/30/2023 12:34:00 PM

Archive: Toledo Rocket Success Stories

By Rachel Cumberledge, University of Toledo Athletic Communications Intern

TOLEDO, Ohio - Most student-athletes have challenges managing their time, but Brooke Stonehouse is in a league of her own.  
 
Brooke, a senior on the Toledo women's soccer team, is a business management and marketing major in the College of Business and Innovation. She is done playing college soccer and is finishing her final semester of classes but is not even close to slowing down. 
 
Since the end of her final season wearing the Midnight Blue and Gold last fall, Brooke has added a lot to her plate. She is interning in the marketing office in the UT Athletic Department and with Buckeye Broadband writing business disclaimers and updating the website. She also works part-time for The Bottom Line, a local CPA firm, and for Data Ongoing, a NetSuite company. 
Brooke Stonehouse with Cookie Man
Brooke Stonehouse escorts the
Cookie Man off the court at a
recent basketball game in her
role as an intern in the
UT Athletic Marketing Office.
 

"I like to be busy, and now that soccer is over I have a lot of free time," said Brooke, a Camarillo, Calif. native. "I've been filling that void with every opportunity I can get my hands on." 
 
For some people, working two internships and two jobs at the same time would be too much, but for Stonehouse it is just right. 
 
"I have found a system that works for me," said Brooke, who is graduating in May and plans to attend graduate school. "I do get tired, but I just have to push through it." She added that two cups of coffee is all she needs to survive most days.    

Brooke used this same work ethic to dedicate herself to both soccer and academics. She is a two-time Academic All-MAC honoree who currently holds a 3.65 GPA. In her four years on the field, Stonehouse played in 40 games and scored four goals. 
 
"Even if I had class and practice, just like any other student-athlete, I knew I had better make it work because there are other things in life after soccer," Brooke said. "I wanted to make sure I'm prepared for that, and that preparation started in the classroom." 
 
Brooke credits her parents, John and Sue Stonehouse, for helping her prepare for the balance between sports and academics.  Both are former college student-athletes. Her father played football at USC and professionally for the New York Giants, and while her mom played soccer at UCLA. They have encouraged their four children to give their all in everything they do.  

"As a family we don't do anything mildly," said John. "We're really all in or nothing." 
 
Sue said that her daughter has always been on the move. She recalled a time when Brooke wanted to learn how to do a cartwheel. She practiced and practiced and practiced, until finally she got the hang of it. 
 
"She was very determined," Sue recalled. "Whatever she wanted to do, she was going to do it."  
 
Younger siblings Jack, Jessie and Josh all view their sister as a role model.  
 
"Her determination is one of the things about her I look up to the most," said Jack, a redshirt freshman punter at Syracuse. "She showed me that even though it is hard, it is possible to be a successful student-athlete at the collegiate level."  
 
Brooke Stonehouse Siblings
Brooke Stonehouse's younger siblings all
play sports and look up to her as a role model.

"I try to train like Brooke because she is where I want to be, physically and mentally," added Jessie, a freshman defender on the women's soccer team at the University of Wyoming. "She never quits and she makes it look easy, even though she is working her tail off to accomplish all the things she has."   
 
If Brooke's devotion to her education and soccer wasn't impressive enough, she also dedicates time throughout the year to her family's non-profit organization, Rolling for Pink.  
 
Rolling for Pink was founded in 2009 by her mom after Brooke's aunt was diagnosed with breast cancer. For the past 12 years, the Stonehouses have hosted a bunco tournament to raise funds for breast cancer research. Brooke's aunt had breast cancer 15 years ago and today she is perfectly healthy. For the first 11 years, Stonehouse and her cousins sold raffle tickets, but this year Brooke took on a bigger role as the donation's coordinator.   
 
"When Rolling for Pink comes around it's a time of year that my whole family comes together to raise awareness of breast cancer," said Brooke. "The event allows us to do something fun and see a smile on the face of women who have breast cancer, survivors, researchers and even doctors."   
 
In 2021, the Stonehouses were unable to obtain the typical donations they had in previous years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  

"We usually would get items from Estee Lauder and other big makeup companies," said Sue. "Brooke was old enough to get a swag bag as a participant and was so disappointed because they were not up to the typical Rolling for Pink standard. So she vowed that the next year she would take over. She got a little taste of success and she's all in now. She's been doing a great job, getting donations and swag bag items." 
 
For Brooke, there was never any doubt that she would thrive in helping the charity event. Whether playing soccer, studying for an exam or helping out a worthy cause, there is only one approach for her. 
 
"If I'm going to do something, it's going to be done 100 percent," Brooke said.

 
Brooke Stonehouse at Rolling for Pink
Brooke Stonehouse (left) and close friend Lexi Carson at this year's Rolling for Pink
charity event. Brooke stepped up to the role of donations coordinator for her
family's charity in 2022.

 
 
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