Latest news with #BowermanAward


USA Today
27-06-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Washington's Moll twins make history yet again as Bowerman semifinalists
Hana and Amanda Moll have to be used to making history at this point. Between the two of them, the twin sisters have set practically every high school and college record in the pole vault over the last three years. They've swept the NCAA Field Athlete of the Year honors, won three NCAA titles, and currently own the best and fifth-best clearances in the world. The Bowerman Award, track and field's equivalent of the Heisman Trophy, released their top 10 semifinalists on Monday. Amanda, who set six NCAA records and won the indoor title, was on there. Hana, who set an NCAA record to win the outdoor title earlier this month, was on there too. They are the first set of sisters to be named semifinalists for the award in the same season. The other semifinalists for the award are NCAA 400m champion Aaliyah Butler (Georgia), 100m and 200m champion JaMeesia Ford (South Carolina), 5k and 10k champion Pamela Kosgei (New Mexico), high jump champion Elena Kulichenko (Georgia), steeplechase champion Doris Lemngole (Alabama), shot put champion Mya Lesnar (Colorado State), 400m hurdles champion Savannah Sutherland (Michigan), and 800m champion Roisin Willis (Stanford). A Washington Husky, man or woman, has never won the Bowerman Award, which began in 2009. Previous winners include 2024 Olympic gold medalists Grant Holloway and Julien Alfred. The winner of the award will be announced in December. The Moll twins will almost certainly be back in action at the US Track and Field Championships, which begin in Eugene, Oregon, on July 31.


USA Today
10-06-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Quarterback Marcus Mariota headlines an impressive Oregon Ducks Hall of Fame class
This was the no-brainer of all no-brainers. As soon as he was eligible, the University of Oregon inducted quarterback Marcus Mariota into the Athletics Hall of Fame. The former signal caller headlines an impressive class that includes a Bowerman Award winner, an Olympic medalist, a Rimington Trophy finalist and nine NCAA championships. Along Mariota will be javelin thrower Sam Crouser, lineman Hroniss Grasu, track star Jenna Prandini, softball player Janie (Takeda) Reed and the 2011-14 women's indoor track and field teams. "The 2025 Hall of Fame Class for Oregon Athletics is truly exceptional, including a Heisman Trophy winner, a Bowerman Award recipient, an Olympic medalist, and multiple NCAA team and individual national champions," said Ducks Athletic Director Rob Mullens. "The excellence achieved by all inductees places them among the very elite in the storied history of Oregon Athletics, and we look forward to honoring them and their remarkable achievements this fall as they take their well-deserved place in the Hall of Fame." One might think these inductees should already be in the Oregon Hall of Fame, given their accolades, and each has a strong case to be in the HOF as soon as they left Oregon, especially Mariota. However, there is a minimum 10-year rule that must be met once they leave Oregon to be eligible. Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle While the others are great Ducks and each deserves a Hall of Fame nod, make no mistake about it, Mariota is the star attraction here. He won the first and so far only Heisman Trophy for Oregon football. He's the most decorated football player in school history with 36 wins, more than any of his contemporaries in three seasons, while breaking numerous school and conference records. Not only did Mariota capture the Heisman, he was also the Player of the Year by the Associated Press, the winner of the Walter Camp Football Foundation, and the Maxwell Award. Mariota was the Pac-12's first three-time all-conference first-team quarterback and finished his career with the school and league record for total offense (13,033), as well as the University's all-time standards for passing yards (10,796), passing touchdowns (105), 300-yard passing games (17), completions (779), attempts (1,167), completion percentage (.668), and starts (41). It's only fitting that the guy who snapped the ball to Mariota for a lot of those games should also be in the Oregon Hall of Fame himself. But Grasu was much more than Mariota's center. He was a four-year starter on teams that won the Rose Bowl twice and the Fiesta Bowl once, and played for the CFP National Championship. Grasu earned first-team All-America honors as both a junior and a senior when he was also a two-time finalist for the Rimington Trophy given to the nation's top center. Grasu received First Team All-America honors from and SB Nation in 2013 on a team that defeated Texas, 30-7, in the Alamo Bowl and ranked second nationally in total offense (565.0 ypg) and fourth in scoring (45.5 ppg). Grasu's senior season was one of the best in program history. The Ducks won the Pac-12 title by defeating Arizona, 51-13, in the league championship game and routed Florida State, 59-20, in the CFP National Semifinal at the Rose Bowl before falling to Ohio State in the championship game. Named First Team All-America by The Sporting News and and Second Team by the Associated Press. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.