Arguably the most decorated men's basketball player in school history, Enfield helped lead Johns Hopkins to a four-year record of 68-40 (.630), two trips to the NCAA Tournament (1990 & 1991), including one appearance in the Sweet 16 (1990), and one Middle Atlantic Conference South Championship (1991). The 20 victories the Blue Jays amassed during the 1989-90 season en route to the Sweet 16 were a then school record.
Enfield's name sits at or near the top of numerous statistical categories at Johns Hopkins. His 2,025 career points are nearly 500 more than any other player in school history has scored, while he is also the career leader in field goals made (680), three-point field goals made (234), career scoring average (18.8), and three-point field goal percentage (.451).
While those numbers are certainly impressive, Enfield saved his best work for the free throw line, where he not only left his mark on the Johns Hopkins record book, but he also left his mark on the NCAA record book as well. Enfield holds JHU career records for free throws made (431) and free throws attempted (466), which translates into an NCAA-record 92.5 accuracy rate. This is a career record for all divisions of NCAA play, which still stands. In addition, he set a then NCAA Division III record for single-season free throw percentage by hitting 123-of-129 (.953) as a senior. The record has since been broken, but still ranks third all-time in NCAA Division III and sixth all-time in all divisions.
Enfield also posted impressive numbers in the classroom as he became the first of four Johns Hopkins men's basketball players to earn an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship. He twice earned GTE Academic All-America honors and earned the Champion/NABC Scholar Athlete of the Year Award as well.