Wendy (Ebinger) Sunderman (1990-94) and teammate Anne Bonner led the women's basketball program to 70 wins in four years, an ECAC championship, another ECAC appearance, and the NCAA Tournament. As seniors, they earned a regional semi-finalist bracket position after trouncing Denison in Erie Hall, but lost to the eventual National Champions, giving Capital its closest game of the entire tournament.

Sunderman was a point guard that made the team go. She could score, play defense, and distribute the ball, but excelled at providing maximum effort, and playing with a sense of urgency. As the leader of the ECAC championship team that finished fifth in scoring defense in 1991-92, she motivated the defense. 

Sunderman completed her career ranked in fifteen categories and ranked first in all-time steals with 290. In her 103 games played, she connected on 41% of her field-goal attempts, and 70% of her free-throws. She finished her career ranked #1 in assists with 386, #1 steals with 290, #2 and #3 in assists in a season, #1 in field-goals made in a game with 12, #1 in assists in a game with 12, and #1 in steals in a season with 104, and #9 in career scoring with 812 points. She averaged 7.8 points per game, 3.7 rebounds per game, 3.7 assists per game, and 2.8 steals a game.

Sunderman, a graduate of New London High School in New London, Ohio, was named Behrend's Female Athlete of the Year in 1994. She earned Dean's List honors in seven of eight semesters and graduated with a degree in English. She teaches in Findlay, Ohio.