Amateur Rust was introduced to the sport of hockey at the age of five, joining a
rec league organized by the
Mississippi RiverKings. As a teenager, she commuted 12 hours every other weekend to play for the
Pittsburgh Penguins Elite's U14 junior program. When she was fifteen, she moved to
Lake Placid, New York to attend the
National Sports Academy. After it shut down, she moved to
Pittsburgh to return to the Penguins' U19 program, living with a
billet family. In 2015, Rust joined the newly promoted
RIT Tigers women's ice hockey program in the
NCAA Division I. She scored 18 points in 35 games in her rookie season, being named to the
College Hockey America All-Rookie Team. After two years in Rochester, she transferred to
Boston University. In her second and final year with the team, she was named an
alternate captain. In the 2019 Beanpot, she scored the game-winning goal over
Northeastern to win the semifinals, and scored the opening goal of the finals, leading the program to its first Beanpot title since 1981. In February 2020, she was inducted into the Beanpot Hall of Fame.
Professional In 2019, Rust originally planned to join the nearby
Worcester Blades of the
Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL), but the league collapsed before she could sign a contract. Instead, she joined over 150 players in the newly created
Professional Women's Hockey Players Association (PWHPA), and would spend the
2019–20 season as an independent affiliate of the organization. During the season, she would also participate in the U.S. Pond Hockey Championships as part of a team from Nashville. Before the 2020–21 season, Rust left the PWHPA to join
KMH Budapest in the
European Women's Hockey League (EWHL). In 2017, Rust was offered a spot on the
American roster for the
2017 IIHF Women's World Championship, as the entire team was striking with the goal of higher pay and better working conditions. She turned the offer down, choosing to stand in solidarity with the striking players. == Personal life ==