In her first season at Chico State, the Wildcats were 24-5 overall and advanced to the NCAA Championship Tournament Sweet 16.
Prior to her stint at Chico State, Goodenbour was the head assistant at the University of San Francisco from 2005-06 and head coach at Santa Rosa Junior College for three seasons (2003-2005).
While at Santa Rosa, her teams compiled a record of 69-21 and won two conference titles. Goodenbour was named Bay Valley Conference Coach of the Year in 2005 as her team advanced to the state quarterfinals. She spent one season as Santa Rosa's associate head coach before taking over the helm in 2003.
Goodenbour began her coaching career at USF during the 1994-95 season when she helped the Dons to an NCAA tournament berth.
Professionally, Goodenbour began her playing career with the Swedish Basketball Federation before returning to play for the Richmond Rage (1996-97) and Portland Power (1997-98) of the American Basketball League. She then played for the Sacramento Monarchs in the WNBA's inaugural season in 1999.
Goodenbour competed at Stanford from 1989-93 and was a member of the Cardinal's NCAA Championship teams in 1990 and 1992. While at Stanford, the shooting guard made three Final Four appearances and was named the Final Four MVP in 1992 after setting an NCAA Tournament record for most postseason three-pointers made (18).
During her four-year collegiate career, the Cardinal posted a 114-16 record, including a 62-1 mark at Maples Pavilion. Goodenbour recorded 1,040 points in her career and remains in the Stanford career record book, ranking eighth in three-pointers made (178), seventh in assists (441), and 10th in free throw percentage (.793).
As a senior, Goodenbour made 74 threes, the seventh-best single-season mark in program history, and recorded nine three-pointers at Tennessee in 1993, the best single-game mark for the Cardinal. She also was a member of the U.S. National team which won a gold medal at the 1993 World Championship Qualifying Tournament in Brazil.
Goodenbour graduated from Waterloo West High School in Waterloo, Iowa, where she still holds the state records for career points with 1,270 and career steals with 354.
She is married to Sonoma State men's basketball coach Pat Fuscaldo.
(May 2015)