The student media organization of California State University Northridge

Daily Sundial

The student media organization of California State University Northridge

Daily Sundial

The student media organization of California State University Northridge

Daily Sundial

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Ashlee Guay and Olympia Jewett announced as nominees for the 2015 Women of the Year Award

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The Matadors celebrate after winning their first Big West Conference Championship against Cal Poly Mustangs at the Honda Center, 73-58. Photo credit: Trevor Stamp

The National Collegiate Athletic Association announced Friday that indoor and outdoor track and field student-athlete Olympia Jewett and all-time scoring Ashlee Guay as nominees for the 2015 Woman of the Year Award.

The award is in it’s twenty-fifth year and honors graduating female college athletes who have exhausted their eligibility and distinguished themselves throughout their collegiate careers in academics, athletics, service and leadership. The 480 nominees are the most in the history of the award.

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The Women’s Basketball seniors Janae Sharpe, left, Randi Friess, Ashlee Guay, Cinnamon Lister and Camille Mahlknecht were honored following the Matadors’ game against Long Beach on March 5, 2015. Photo credit: Trevor Stamp

The Women’s Basketball seniors Janae Sharpe, left, Randi Friess, Ashlee Guay, Cinnamon Lister and Camille Mahlknecht were honored following the Matadors’ game against Long Beach on March 5, 2015. Photo credit: Trevor Stamp

Guay helped lead the Matadors to back-to-back Big West Conference Tournament championships and back-to-back NCAA Tournament Appearances and a program-record 23 regular season wins.

“Realizing that I had to make sacrifices for the team came quickly, but being able to represent something bigger than myself was the best feeling,” Guay said in her personal statement. “Putting on that jersey, playing for the name on my chest and inspiring others, is a feeling I will never forget.”

Guay left the CSUN and Big West record books near the top in points scored, steals, assists and games played.

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Olympia Jewett and the CSUN Track & Field team dominated all season en route to a 2015 Big West Conference Championship Photo credit: Richard Kontas

The CSUN track and field team was filled with dominant performers like Olympia Jewett. Photo credit: Richard Kontas

Jewett leaves CSUN with a littany of success in her career in the heptathalon, relays, long and triple jumps, hurdles and 100 and 200 meter events. She concluded her career as a part of a team that dominated at the Big West Conference Championships en route to CSUN’s ninth Big West Conference Championship.

“When I came to college to compete in track and field, the goal was not to just succeed at my sport,” Jewett said about the importance of being a well-rounded student-athlete in her personal statement. “I was determined to get a higher education and reach out to as many people as I could.”

The NCAA encourages it’s member schools to honor its top graduating female student-athletes each year by submitting their names for consideration for the Woman of the Year Award. Respective conferences assess nominee eligibility and select up to two conference nominees.

All conference nominees are forwarded to the Woman of the Year selection committee, which chooses the top-30 honorees, with 10 from each division. From the top-30, the selection committee determines the top-three nominees from each division and announces the top-nine finalists in September.

The NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics then chooses from from those nine to determine the 2015 NCAA Woman of the Year.

The 2015 NCAA Woman of the Year winner will be announced, along with the top-30 honorees celebrated at the annual award ceremony Oct. 18 in Indianapolis. The full list is available here and the NCAA’s release here.

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