Hill is a
3.0 point player, In
financial year 2012/13, the
Australian Sports Commission gave her a
A$20,000 grant as part of their Direct Athlete Support (DAS) program. She received $11,000 in 2011/12, $17,000 in 2010/11, $5,571.42 in 2009/10 and $5,200 in 2008/09. In 2012 and 2013, she had a scholarship with the
New South Wales Institute of Sport.
Club Hill currently plays club wheelchair basketball for the Sydney University Flames in the Australian Women's National Wheelchair Basketball League (WNWBL), and the Sydney University Wheelkings in the mixed National Wheelchair basketball League. In all, the Hornets won eight straight championships from 2002 to 2009, before changing their name to the Sydney University Flames in 2010, and claiming a ninth title that year.
National team Hill made her national team debut in 2005 in Malaysia at the World Junior Wheelchair Basketball Championships. at the
IWBF World Wheelchair Basketball Championship in
Amsterdam in the Netherlands in 2006, at the 2007 Asia Oceania Qualification tournament, and at the 2007 and 2009 Osaka Cup in Japan. By August 2012, she had played 110 international games.
Paralympics Hill was part of the bronze medal-winning team at the
2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, and again at the
2012 Summer Paralympics in London. The
Australia women's national wheelchair basketball team at the 2012 Summer Paralympics posted wins in the group stage against Brazil, Great Britain, and the Netherlands, but lost to the Canada. This was enough to advance the Gliders to the quarter-finals, where they beat Mexico. The Gliders then defeated the United States by a point to set up a final clash with Germany. The Gliders lost 44–58, and earned a silver medal. Hill played in all seven games, for a total of 107 minutes, scoring 25 points, with six assists and eight
rebounds. ==Statistics==