As part of the USA Junior World team, she scored 10 goals in the 2005 World Cup, leading the team to its best ever finish of seventh place. Crandall joined the
United States women's national field hockey team in 2005. A broken hand in 2006 forced Crandall to sit out the 2006 World Cup. At the
2011 Pan American Games, the team won gold, defeating then reigning World Cup champions Argentina. By 2012, Crandall was named team captain. The team finished a disappointed 12th place out of 12 teams at the
2012 Summer Olympics in
London. Crandall scored a goal against Germany in the team's opening game. Having failed to qualify for the 2010 World Cup, the team finished fourth in the 2014 World Cup. Crandall was part of the US Team that repeated as gold medal champion at the
2015 Pan American games and won the bronze medal at the
2016 Champions Trophy. The team went into the 2016 Summer Olympics ranked fifth in the world, the highest ever ranking for the program. Crandall was again part of the U.S. team for the
2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, her third Olympic games with the team. The team placed 5th overall. Over the course of her field hockey career, Crandall played 279 games with the Us National team. She announced her retirement in November 2016. Upon her retirement, US women's head coach
Craig Parnham praised Crandall as an "international powerhouse." In June 2014, Crandall was inducted into the Holicong Hall of Fame. ==References==