One of Colorado's Highest Honor
The Sportswoman of the Year award is our most prestigious recognition, celebrating exceptional achievement during the calendar year. Since 1974, this award has honored Colorado’s most outstanding female athletes from Olympic champions to pioneering trailblazers who have elevated women’s sports on the world stage.
Each year, one exceptional athlete stands above the rest, demonstrating excellence, dedication, and impact that inspires the next generation of Colorado sportswomen.
Valarie Allman
Valarie Allman is the queen of Colorado sports once again.
Allman, who became the first American woman to win two Olympic gold medals in discus last summer in Paris, was named the Colorado Sportswoman of the Year by Sportswomen of Colorado on Sunday night.
It marks the second such honor for Allman, who was also Sportswoman of the Year following her Olympic triumph in Tokyo in 2021. In Paris, the Silver Creek graduate topped China’s Bin Feng and Croatia’s Sandra Elkasević with a winning throw of 69.50 meters. She then went on to win the Diamond League final in September, capping her perfect season.
“This last summer in Paris, (another gold) was my big dream,” Allman said in her acceptance speech. “I had thought about it so much — to have my family there, to have my fiance (and coach Zeb Sion) there, to have the full stadium full of energy there — and to have it pay off was so incredibly special.”
Allman first attended the Sportswomen of Colorado banquet as a senior in high school, an experience that she said stoked her discus dreams.
“To walk into that banquet and hear about women who were at the Olympics, or breaking records, or who were so much further along in their journey and had that maturity and confidence, it was amazing to be able to have those up-close experiences with them,” Allman told The Post. “It helped me realize what I aspired to be.”
With the victory in Paris, Allman became only the third thrower ever to win consecutive Olympic golds, joining Elkasević and East Germany’s Evelin Jahl. Allman, a former Stanford star who was a six-time All-American there plus a two-time Pac-12 discus champion, is also the only American woman to medal at multiple World Athletics Championships.
Allman remains the No. 1-ranked discus thrower in the world, according to World Athletics. The competitive dancer-turned-thrower also holds the top 13 marks ever thrown by an American woman.
At the top of her game, the 30-year-old is intent on making a push to win a third gold medal at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics — a feat that’s never been done.
“To be the best in the world, you have to always have that north star of what you’re aiming for, and for me (a third gold) is definitely where we’re trying to go and accomplish,” Allman told The Post. “To be able to be in the fight, be healthy and have a shot to make history by going for one more gold would be the ultimate ending to my story in athletics.”
By winning a second Colorado Sportswoman of the Year, Allman becomes the seventh athlete to claim the honor multiple times. The others are cyclist Connie Carpenter-Phinney, soccer player/coach April Heinrichs, swimmer Amy Van Dyken, runner Jenny Simpson, swimmer Missy Franklin and skier Mikaela Shiffrin, who holds the record with six nods.
“This was really one of the first awards I’ve ever won that made me feel like my little niche sport was something bigger than myself,” Allman told The Post. “This many years later, to be able to have that moment again, feels amazing.”
Written by: Kyle Newman | Denver Post
Article Link: Denver Post
Honoring Colorado Sportswoman of the Year
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
World Cup Alpine Ski Racing Champion
Throughout the World Cup season, Shiffrin dominated. She secured her fifth overall World Cup title, a feat she had previously achieved in 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2022. Her overall title was complemented by her discipline-specific gold medals in slalom and giant slalom. Shiffrin has 17 gold medals from the Olympic Games and World Championships from 2013-2023.
Her excellence extended beyond individual race victories. Shiffrin’s consistent performances across various disciplines—slalom, giant slalom, super-G, and downhill—showcased her versatility and mastery of the sport. In the 2023 FIS Alpine Ski World Championships held in Méribel, France, Shiffrin captured gold in the giant slalom, adding to her extensive collection of championship medals. Her tally is now 14—a record in the modern era and just one medal shy of the all-time record of 15.
2023 was a year of consistent success for Mikaela Shiffrin. She finished the year with 88 total World Cup victories. Since 2014, Shiffrin has won Sportswoman of the Year a record six times.
Jennifer Kupcho – Golf
LPGA Tour Champion
Kupcho attended Wake Forest University and continued her dominance. During her freshman season, Kupcho became the first player in Wake Forest history to conclude the NCAA Championship under par and won the Colorado sectional qualifier to play in the 2016 U.S. Women’s Open. However, Jennifer’s junior season proved to be a breakout year. While maintaining the honor roll, she became the first National Player of the Year in Wake Forest history by winning the 2018 Honda Award and the NCAA Championship. She won four events (Ocean Course Invitational, Bryan National Collegiate, NCAA Tallahassee Regional, NCAA Championship) and became the No. 1 amateur in the world (WAGR). “Kupcho was the number one ranked women’s amateur golfer in the world for a total of 34 weeks, rising to the top on three occasions, the first time on July 11, 2018.” After graduating from Wake Forest, Kupcho earned a LPGA Card and made her pro debut at 2019 US Women’s Open. She won the inaugural 2019 Augusta National Women’s Amateur. In 2021, Kupcho recorded five top-10 finishes, including a season-best runner-up finish at the LPGA Drive-On Championship at Golden Ocala and became a member of the U.S. Solheim Cup Team. Kupcho has three wins and 1 major in the LPGA Tour Victories. In 2022, she won The Chevron Championship, Meijer LPGA Classic for Simply Give, and the Dow Great Lake Bay Invitational.
Sportswomen of Colorado has had our eye on Kupcho for a long time as she has scored huge success on every level. Kupcho is a member of the Sportswomen of Colorado Hall of Fame, back-to-back winner of the Professional Athlete of the Year Award, and now, the Sportswoman of the Year in 2022.
Valarie Allman – Track and Field
Olympic Gold Medalist
Allman attended Stanford University and upon her arrival, immediately began breaking records being named the 2014 Pac-12 women’s track and field Newcomer/Freshman of the Year. Allman holds the 2014 U.S. junior national discus title with a personal best and Stanford freshman record 188-6. She threw the hammer for the first time, throwing 155-11 for fifth place. Allman’s sophomore year began by winning the discus at the Outdoor Opener in Berkeley, throwing 183-4. She held the Pac-12 discus title with a throw of 187-3, setting a personal best in the hammer, with a throw of 172-10. At Allman’s first indoor meet, she set a school record in the 20-pound weight throw of 62-8 1/2 at the MPSF Championships, placing fifth. In her senior year, she was the U.S. discus champion throwing the furthest of any American (208-6, 63.55m). She was also No. 2 on Stanford’s all-time list in the hammer, was on the U.S. national team for Athletics World Cup, and was fourth in the Pac-12 in the hammer at 208-10 (63.65m). Allman finished her collegiate career as a six-time All-American. At the 2020 Olympics, Allman won a gold medal when she threw 68.98 meters in the discus. Allman also participated in the World Championships in 2017 and 2019. In 2019 she placed seventh, throwing 202 feet, 10 inches in discus.
In an interview about being a thrower, Allman said, “There is a poetic movement to it that really helped when I first started, and it’s become such a passion in every sense. It’s a combination of grace, strength, balance, having an awareness of your body and being able to move it with force.” (Longmont leader.com, 8/3/21)
Dani Jones – Running
Ultra-Marathon Champion
Jones attended the University of Colorado as a distance runner, and continued her record-breaking style. Jones won four NCAA National Championships, earned twelve All-American Honors, and broke two school records. She excelled in cross country, indoor track and field, and outdoor track and field, and cemented her position as one of the best indoor track and field milers in CU history by winning a pair of mile runs. She was the 2018 NCAA Women’s Cross-Country Champion and during her sophomore indoor season, Jones won 2 National titles in the 3,000-meter run and the distance medley relay. During the 2018 indoor campaign, at the NCAA Championships, Jones recorded a personal best in the mile clocked in at 4:31.82 taking second place.
During the 2020 indoor season, Jones was the only female athlete with NCAA top-10 marks in the mile and 5,000 on a 200-meter track. Jones was named the 2020 U.S. Track & Field, and Cross-Country Coaches Association (“USTFCCCA”) Indoor Female Athlete of the Year. She is a three-time Sportswomen of Colorado (“SWOC”) awards recipient, placing her in the SWOC Hall of Fame. In 2020, she was honored with SWOC’s Sportswomen of Colorado Sportswoman of the Year Award.
Sarah Thomas – Open Water Swimming
Record-Breaking Swimmer
In 2007, Thomas began long-distance swimming in open water when she swam a 10K at Horsetooth Reservoir. Thomas is noted as saying, “I was dead tired when I got out, but I knew I’d found my niche.” (5280.com, December 2017) In 2013, Thomas was the first person to swim 42 miles at Lake Tahoe and 50 miles at Double Lake Memphremagog. On July 3, 2015, Thomas swam Flathead Lake setting a record for her first unassisted swim, completing 27.6 miles in 13 hours and 39 minutes. In 2016, Thomas was the first person to swim 80 miles across Lake Tahoe. Over a four-day span in August of 2017, Thomas set a world record for the longest unassisted open water swim in current-neutral water when she swam 104.6 miles in Lake Champlain in 67 hours and 16 minutes. Thomas received the world record in the longest unassisted open water swim which was her first current-neutral 100+ swim. August 10, 2019, Thomas swam her first two-way crossing Blue Mesa Reservoir, completing 31 miles in 15:36:23. Shortly after this swim, Thomas was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer, and she had to undergo aggressive treatments. “In the darkest of times, there is still a chance you can still achieve good things if you just believe in yourself.”—Sarah Thomas
On September 17, 2019, Thomas completed a record swim of the English Channel. On September 17, 2019, Thomas completed a record swim of the English Channel when she swam across it four consecutive times which totaled 84 miles. She accomplished this feat in 54 hours and 10 minutes. Thomas dedicated this achievement to breast cancer survivors everywhere.
Since the beginning of her career, Thomas has received many accolades and recognition for her record breaking swims. In 2018, Thomas was named as an Honor Swimmer with the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame. When she’s not training and swimming, Thomas is an inspirational speaker, coaches open water swimming, and is a veterinarian recruiter.
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
World Cup Alpine Ski Racing Champion
The 23-year-old, who is on course to be the greatest skier of all time, recently captured her fourth straight slalom title at the world championships in Sweden. Something no other alpine skier- male or female- has ever done.
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
Olympic Gold Medalist and World Champion
Emma Coburn – Track and Field
Olympic Bronze Medalist in Steeplechase
During her high school career at Crested Butte Community School, Coburn was introduced to the steeplechase. It was the only event available during the track meet, so she filled the spot gaining a passion for long distance running. In 2007, Coburn was a 2A state champion and received All-American Honors. Coburn ran the 2,000-meter steeplechase at the Nike Outdoor Nationals taking 2nd place in 2008.
Coburn attended the University of Colorado. During her matriculation, Coburn was a five time All-American and an Eight-time All-Conference honoree. Coburn was named the 2011 Mile-High Sports Magazine Collegiate Athlete of the Year. She was the youngest U.S. runner to compete at the 2012 Olympics, becoming a Steeplechase Olympian. She was named as the 2013 USTFCCA Indoor and Outdoor Mountain Region Female Track Athlete of the Year, and the 2013 Bowerman Semifinalist. Coburn ended her career at the University of Colorado as a two-time NCAA champion and the 5th CU athlete to win an Olympic medal.
As a professional runner, Coburn participated in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, becoming the first U.S. woman to stand on an Olympic 3000m steeplechase podium. She received the Bronze medal, with a record time of 9:07.63, breaking her own American record. In 2011and 2013, Coburn won gold at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 3000m Steeplechase. 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 Coburn won gold at the USATF Outdoor Championships in the 3000m Steeplechase. Emma Coburn, 2016 Sportswoman of the Year, has earned her spot in history!
Jenny Simpson – Track and Field
Olympic Bronze Medalist in 1500m
Simpson, one of the most decorated female runners in U.S. history and one of the most accomplished CU runners ever, was competing in her third Olympics. She was ninth in the steeplechase in Beijing in 2008 and advanced to the semifinals of the 1,500 in 2012 in London. She also won the World Championships gold medal in the 1,500 in 2011 and was the silver medalist in the event in 2013. She was also the 2014 Diamond League champion in the 1,500 in 2014. Her personal best of 3:57.22 is still the second fastest in American history.
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
World Championship Gold Medalist
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
Olympic Gold Medalist in Slalom
She now has more than 10 World Cup slalom victories and one World Cup giant slalom win. She also was the U.S. National giant slalom champion in 2014. In 2013, she not only was the overall World Cup gold medalist with five first-place finishes and two third-place finishes – but also the youngest winner since 1974. She is the most prolific among all but three U.S. women in history as well as the first slalom gold medalist in her first World Championships in Austria.
Actually, she is the first American women to earn two World Cup gold medals before the age of 18. Technical races are her forte – her style is smooth and her turns are efficient…or, as she states: “When I ski, it’s like a song. I can hear the rhythm in my head.
She learned the great turns skiing the trees of Vail when she was very young. Her family moved to New Hampshire when she was 8, but when they saw how serious she was about racing, they moved back to Vail when she was 13. Although she graduated from New England’s Burke Mountain Academy in 2013, she chose to not attend college so she could pursue her sport’s activities worldwide.
At the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, she stunned the crowd with the fastest run in the slalom competition and then survived a scary “ski impairment bobble” on the second run to become the “youngest Olympic slalom champion in history:…or as her agent said: “She took her heart in her hands and brought it down the hill.”
Right now, she wants to improve in the Giant Slalom in which she’s only had one World Cup victory and one U.S. National Championship.
Shiffrin also enjoys Soccer, Tennis, Music, the Beach and Family time.
Mikaela Shiffrin – Skiing
World Championship Gold Medalist
She now has more than 10 World Cup slalom victories and one World Cup giant slalom win. She also was the U.S. National giant slalom champion in 2014. In 2013, she not only was the overall World Cup gold medalist with five first-place finishes and two third-place finishes – but also the youngest winner since 1974. She is the most prolific among all but three U.S. women in history as well as the first slalom gold medalist in her first World Championships in Austria.
Actually, she is the first American women to earn two World Cup gold medals before the age of 18. Technical races are her forte – her style is smooth and her turns are efficient…or, as she states: “When I ski, it’s like a song. I can hear the rhythm in my head.
She learned the great turns skiing the trees of Vail when she was very young. Her family moved to New Hampshire when she was 8, but when they saw how serious she was about racing, they moved back to Vail when she was 13. Although she graduated from New England’s Burke Mountain Academy in 2013, she chose to not attend college so she could pursue her sport’s activities worldwide.
Missy Franklin – Swimming
Olympic Champion - 4 Gold Medals
As the holder of 10 national age group records, Missy became a national role model when she competed in the U.S. Olympic Trials at age 13. At 14, she was named to the USA Swimming ‘s prestigious Duel in Pool team and swam with Michael Phelps and other U.S. stars in Manchester, England. At the 2010 National Championships, the 6-foot-1 Centennial teenager competed in six individual events and qualified for the 2010 Pan Pacific Championships. She then earned her first international medals with two silvers at the 2010 FINA Short Course Championships in Dubai and was named Breakout Performer of the Year at the Golden Goggle Awards. Her first long-course world championship meet was at age 15 in the 2011 World Aquatics Championship in Shanghai where she captured five medals (three gold, one silver and one bronze) and earned FINA Swimmer of the Year laurels. She also was the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s top 2010 Prep Athlete and 2011 Athlete of the Year.
In London, Missy swept the 100- and 200-meter backstroke events and took top honors in the 4×200-meter freestyle and 4×100 medley relays, setting world records in the 200 back and 4×100 medley relay. She also won a bronze medal in the 4x 100 freestyle relay and at year’s end, was named both American and World Swimmer of the Year by Swimming World magazine.
Instead of cashing in on her celebrity status, Missy returned to the Colorado Stars and prep competition, sparking Regis Jesuit H. S. to its second state title in three years. She continues to refuse prize money and endorsements so she can maintain her amateur status in college, even though at the end of 2012, she had won 12 medals in international competition and owned four World and two American records. No wonder she wears size 13 shoes!
Missy Franklin – Swimming
World Championship Gold Medalist
As the holder of 10 national age group records, Missy became a national role model when she competed in the U.S. Olympic Trials at age 13. At 14, she was named to the USA Swimming ‘s prestigious Duel in Pool team and swam with Michael Phelps and other U.S. stars in Manchester, England. At the 2010 National Championships, the 6-foot-1 Centennial teenager competed in six individual events and qualified for the 2010 Pan Pacific Championships. She then earned her first international medals with two silvers at the 2010 FINA Short Course Championships in Dubai and was named Breakout Performer of the Year at the Golden Goggle Awards. Her first long-course world championship meet was at age 15 in the 2011 World Aquatics Championship in Shanghai where she captured five medals (three gold, one silver and one bronze) and earned FINA Swimmer of the Year laurels. She also was the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s top 2010 Prep Athlete and 2011 Athlete of the Year.
In London, Missy swept the 100- and 200-meter backstroke events and took top honors in the 4×200-meter freestyle and 4×100 medley relays, setting world records in the 200 back and 4×100 medley relay. She also won a bronze medal in the 4x 100 freestyle relay and at year’s end, was named both American and World Swimmer of the Year by Swimming World magazine.
Instead of cashing in on her celebrity status, Missy returned to the Colorado Stars and prep competition, sparking Regis Jesuit H. S. to its second state title in three years. She continues to refuse prize money and endorsements so she can maintain her amateur status in college, even though at the end of 2012, she had won 12 medals in international competition and owned four World and two American records. No wonder she wears size 13 shoes!
Alana Nichols – Mono Skiing
Paralympic Champion
After two years of rehab, Alana came back to sports. In 2003 she began playing wheelchair basketball for the University of Arizona. She got back up on the ski slopes, this time on a mono-ski. Last year, 10 years after her accident, she went to the Paralympic Games in Vancouver and captured the gold medal in the Giant Slalom and Downhill. She won the silver in the Super G. She won bronze in the Super Combined.
Two years earlier, in 2008 in Beijing, Alana helped her U.S. Women’s Paralympic Basketball Team bring home the Gold medal. She is the first woman ever to earn two gold medals in two different sports on the Paralympic world stage! She’s a graduate of the University of Alabama with a master’s degree in Kinesiology and plans to specialize in exercise science working with Veterans and others with spinal cord injuries.
Congratulations to Alana Nichols, our award winner in adaptive skiing and our 2010 Colorado Sportswoman of the Year!
Jenny Barringer – Track and Field
World Championship Gold Medalist in Steeplechase
The native of Oviedo, Fla., won a trio of Big 12 titles in 2009 (indoor mile, steeplechase and cross country) and a pair of NCAA Championships (indoor 3k and the steeplechase). Barringer became the first Buff, male or female, to win three NCAA individual titles in the same event (three in the steeplechase) and the first female to win four NCAA crowns. Her mile time of 4:25.91 was the fastest run in the world during the 2009 season. On the track Barringer did not lose a single collegiate race in 2009 and was always the top American to cross the finish no matter where she raced (also in track).
The native of Oviedo, Fla., won a trio of Big 12 titles in 2009 (indoor mile, steeplechase and cross country) and a pair of NCAA Championships (indoor 3k and the steeplechase). Barringer became the first Buff, male or female, to win three NCAA individual titles in the same event (three in the steeplechase) and the first female to win four NCAA crowns. Her mile time of 4:25.91 was the fastest run in the world during the 2009 season. On the track Barringer did not lose a single collegiate race in 2009 and was always the top American to cross the finish no matter where she raced (also in track).
The 2009 Big 12 Indoor Performer of the Year was also the USTFCCCA Indoor and Outdoor Female Track Athlete of the Year. Barringer won her second USA Track & Field steeplechase title in June and then raced to a fifth-place finish at the IAAF World Championships in August; slashing 10 seconds off her personal and American record with a time of 9:12.50 to become the eighth fastest woman ever in the event.
Barringer was a member of the Academic All-Big 12 first team (cross country and track & field), the Dean’s List, the Big 12 Commissioner’s Honor Roll and was a 2008 and 09 Academic All-American. She owns a 3.7 GPA and graduated in December with a double-major in political science and economics. Barringer has also been recognized the past two years as a semi-finalist for the Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup Award.
Erin Popovich – Paralympic Games
Paralympic Swimming Champion
Erin grew up in Montana, showing horses as a child. She wanted to be a veterinarian when she “grew up,” so she enrolled at Colorado State University. It was the perfect fit in so many ways! As a freshman, she walked on to the swim team – the DIVISION ONE swim team. Now, granted she was born within one day of Michael Phelps in 1985 and she knows Michael Phelps. They both have lots of medals hanging around their necks from the Beijing Olympics. There’s one small difference, Michael Phelps is 6 feet 5 inches tall. Our Sportswoman is 4 feet 5 inches tall.
John Mattos, coach of women’s swimming at CSU, describes his first meeting with our sportswoman this way, “She came in and sat down in my office and said she wanted to swim at the collegiate level. She was sitting in the chair across from me and her feet didn’t begin to touch the ground. We gave it a go and we’ve never looked back. She’s a gem to coach and to simply be around.”
Our Sportswoman of the Year graduated from CSU in 2008 with a degree in Health and Exercise Science. She isn’t going the veterinarian route anymore. She would like to go into medicine to study how the body works, how it adapts to training and how it can go BEYOND the perceived limitations of what we think it can and cannot do.
Erin showed the world that anything is possible!
Katie Uhlaender – Sledding/Skeleton
World Cup Champion
After two years of rehab, Alana came back to sports. In 2003 she began playing wheelchair basketball for the University of Arizona. She got back up on the ski slopes, this time on a mono-ski. Last year, 10 years after her accident, she went to the Paralympic Games in Vancouver and captured the gold medal in the Giant Slalom and Downhill. She won the silver in the Super G. She won bronze in the Super Combined.
Two years earlier, in 2008 in Beijing, Alana helped her U.S. Women’s Paralympic Basketball Team bring home the Gold medal. She is the first woman ever to earn two gold medals in two different sports on the Paralympic world stage! She’s a graduate of the University of Alabama with a master’s degree in Kinesiology and plans to specialize in exercise science working with Veterans and others with spinal cord injuries.
Congratulations to Alana Nichols, our award winner in adaptive skiing and our 2010 Colorado Sportswoman of the Year!
Melanie Troxel – Motor Sports
NHRA Drag Racing Champion
Melanie hails from Littleton, but her home is really the track – as in speeding on a track at a sizzling-best quarter-mile elapsed time of 4.458 seconds in 2006. Officially recognized as the quickest and fastest woman in her sport, the stunning 1990 Bear Creek High School grad is a favorite of millions of fans for successfully competing on an equal footing with men.
In February of 2006, Melanie won the National Hot Rod Assoc-iations winter championship and became the 6th woman ever to win a Top Fuel Event. She then became the only drag racer, male or female, to open a regular 23-event season with five consecutive final-round appearances and followed with a debut in the winners’ circle at the Hot Rod Nationals in April.
After clocking a career-best speed of 331.04 mph in May, Melanie received ESPY nominations for “Best Female Athlete” and “Best Driver” in June. Even the Driver of the Year Foundation which never in its 40-year history had honored a woman, selected her over three frontrunning male NASCAR drivers for its DYF first-quarter award. And the accolades kept coming!
In the second half of the season, the Coloradan received a USAC Spirit Award and was elected the Women’s Sports Foundation’s individual Sportswoman of the Year by internet vote of sports enthusiasts nationwide. Finishing 2006 ranked 4th overall in the NHRA Top Fuel Division, the phenom set a goal of becoming the first female since 1982 to win a Top Fuel championship.
Married to Funny Car driver Tommy Johnson, Jr., Melanie now lives outside Indianapolis where she owns a specialty automotive tool shop and enjoys the area’s superior training opportunities.
Abby Waner – Basketball
NCAA All-American
Abby certainly provided good reasons for that assessment. In her senior year as a prepster, she led her ThunderRidge team to a second straight Class 5A basketball title. Her scoring average of more than 31 points per game was not only the best on her squad, but the best in Colorado and she was the second-ranked scorer all time in the state.
She set new school records in just about every category – from three-pointers to steals to assists – while also establishing Colorado state records for steals and points scored in a game, achieving the latter with a whopping 61-point performance.
Small wonder she was lauded as Colorado Ms. Basketball for the second time in a row in 2005. This 5-11 All-America guard and A-student owned the court everywhere she went, including the World Championships, where her Under-19 team captured gold.
At graduation, Abby’s career points added up to an astounding 2,670 and the phenomenal prep tally was accompanied by 632 rebounds….588 assists…and 535 steals! En route, she was crowned National Player of the Year by Gatorade and McDonald’s. A strong on-court leader and motivator, who played her hardest every practice and game, Abby set the bar high for her teammates and was a “play hard-study hard” mentor to many younger players. When Duke University took a look at Abby’s solid on-court achievements and impressive 3.9 off-court Grade Point Average, it didn’t take the top-notch basketball power long to issue the ThunderRidge standout an invitation to join the Blue Devils’ program with a full-scholarship incentive.
And Abby didn’t disappoint. Becoming an instant headliner in her freshman year, this remarkable All-everything Player proved why she was Sportswomen of Colorado’s 2005 Sportswoman of the Year.
April Heinrichs – Soccer Coach
U.S. Women's National Team Coach, Olympic Gold
But that’s all right with her, since 1991, as a coach, she’s been reaping victories on the stage she set as a player. In 5 years as head coach of the U.S. Women’s National Team, she led her squads to a silver medal in the 2000 Olympics, 3rd place in the 2003 World Cup and gold in the 2004 Athens Olympics.
Katelyn Kaltenbach – Cross Country
High School National Champion
Katelyn went undefeated all year long, clinched the state championship, the regional championship and the national championship—a high-pressure race featuring the 32 top competitors in the country—becoming only the 3rd Colorado athlete ever, male or female, to bring home the national crown. Her time at Nationals made her the second-fastest Colorado female athlete and the second fastest ever in her event.
But the Kaltenbach name did not just appear on the scene. Last year when Katelyn competed for the state title in her sport she was edged out by only Megan Kaltenbach—her own sister—who had captured the crown for 4 years straight. There’s a family dynasty at play here with the latest champion building a legacy of her own as the #1 prep star in her sport.
Katelyn also happens to be a state championship track and field star, but the sport she rules is cross-country, where she owns the 5K.
Ellen Miller – Mountaineering
First American woman to summit Everest from north and south
2002 Winner
Ellen Miller – Mountaineering
First American woman to summit Everest from north and south
She is into doing things that have never been done before. For example, you might not know that there is a world record for Highest Altitude Ski Descent, but there is and in 1998 she broke it.
Okay, maybe she’s not so typical. When she tells you she’s off to compete in a race she is not talking about a lOK—try the Leadville lOO-mile run. Or if she says she’s going to take a hike don’t hold dinner. To her, that could mean a 3-month trek along the Continental Divide.
And when our 2002 Sportswoman of the Year conquered the Divide, she also raised $20,000 for the Food Bank of the Rockies. When she climbed the world’s highest mountain, afterwards, she gave a slide show to help raise money for children with disabilities. Then she started a learning program aimed at teaching kids about reaching their highest goals. In fact, she’s a volunteer and fundraiser of the highest order-for causes that run the gamut from feeding the hungry to the protecting the environment.
Ellen climbed all of Colorado’s fourteeners in short order and after that, she moved onto climbing just about any summit she could find-from volcanoes in Mexico to granite spires in the Alps. Her list of mountains summated—in addition to Rainer, Kilimanjaro, and Denali—includes the likes of Cotopaxi and Chimborazo in Ecuador, Mt. Elbrus in Russia and Aconcagua in Argentina. And that’s just the beginning of a very long list.
In short, she’s an athlete who does the impossible. For example, when she climbed Everest from the north side, she did something no American woman had ever done before. And when she turned around and did it from the south side that made her the only woman—the one and only woman—to ever reach the summit of Mt. Everest twice in the same year.
She is an athlete like no other, and a Colorado Sportswoman in every sense of the word.
Alison Dunlap – Mountain Biking
World Champion
“I wanted to do this for everybody who has suffered and lost loved ones,” the event’s first U.S. winner in 10 years said after waving a small U.S. flag triumphantly across the finish line to vanquish tragedy and claim the first world title of her career.
It had been a long journey from Colorado College to that memorable moment. A soccer player at Smoky Hill H.S., she was disappointed when she didn’t make the CC team. Switching to road cycling, she captured the 1991 NCAA championship, made the 1992 Olympic Trials and qualified No. 3 for the 1996 Summer Games. Taking up mountain biking after Atlanta, she rode to Pan American gold in 1999 and 7th place at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
The 2001 World title culminated a stellar mountain bike year for the 32-year-old two-time Olympian. A top three finisher in four of six major races, she garnered year end rankings of No. 4 in the World and No. 6 in World Cup competition. Two wins also gave her a No. 5 ranking on the U.S. National Short Track Series.
A force on the road circuit as well, she prevailed in the Tour of Willamette (OR), was third in the Redlands (CA) Classic and set a record on the mountain roads outside Boise (ID) to win the third stage of the International Women’s Challenge for the third time in her career. The SWC Hall of famer then made U.S. women’s cycling history with a fifth straight U.S. Cyclo-Cross championship earning a berth on the 2002 U.S. World Cyclo-Cross Team.
At the end of 2001, the Colorado Springs based cyclist was named Amateur Athlete of the Year by the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame and was nominated by USA Cycling for the 72nd annual AAU Sullivan Award and 2001 U.S. Olympic Sportswoman of the Year.
Kara Grgas-Wheeler – Running
U.S. Marathon Champion
After siting out the NCAA-Division I Indoor season because of debilitating anemia following a difficult rehabilitation for 1997 leg surgery, she charged into spring competition and became CU’s first ever dual titlist at the NCAA-Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships in May 2000.
Successfully defending her national 3000-meter crown, she captured a second diadem in the 5,000-meter race and logged All-America times in both, all after coming into the meet as Big 12 champion for the 1500-meter distance.
In the fall, she continued her history making collegiate campaign. Sparking CU to its first ever NCAA cross-country team championship, the Buff speedster also became the first CU runner to win an individual NCAA cross-country title and she did so with an impressive 20:30.5 effort in 17-degree temperature and a wind chill of -19 degrees, prevailing by 7 seconds over the same Iowa State course on which she earlier had logged a 20:27 record on a warmer day. En route to her third and fourth national triumphs of the year, the Buff pacesetter picked up the Big 12 and Mountain Region cross-country championships and was named to the All-Big 12, All Region and All-America first teams. With her 3.685 GPA, the psychology major was an All-Big 12 Academic pick for the second time in 2000.
Even more remarkable was Kara’s end-of-season cross-country status as the nation’s only undefeated female runner. Tested by 1,035 of her peers, she had lost to none.
Small wonder that for the year 2000, she was one of 12 National Honda Award finalists for the prestigious Broderick Cup, the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame’s Female College Athlete of the Year and Sportswomen of Colorado’s Sportswoman of the Year.
Ann Battelle – Skiing
Freestyle Skiing World Champion
Instead of heading for Japan on the highest possible note however, she crashed in the wrapup, her bruised ribs and arms setting the stage for a disappointing 10th in her best event at the ensuing Winter Games.
It was a painful physical and mental turning point for the New York born U.S. team member but not the end of her career. Freed of Olympic pressure and expectation the one-time gymnast gained new found enthusiasm for the sport she took up after graduating from Middlebury College (VT) and moving to Colorado in 1989. She also changed the face of women’s mogul skiing from the petite grace of her predecessors to an aggressive, “go for it” style.
In a stunning comeback, the 5’ 9” aerialist amazed even herself by totally dominating the 1999 circuit. Ironically, she started the year by winning a World Cup event in Japan and it was all sunshine from there. Soaring to the World Cup points title in moguls, she flew on to gold in moguls and bronze in dual moguls at the World Championships in Switzerland and then returned home to Utah to capture season ending U. S. titles in both singles and dual moguls. Not surprisingly, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association named her its 1999 female athlete of the year.
After receiving Colorado Sportswoman of the Year honors for her spectacular 1999 success, Ann continued to prove her mettle. With two wins, three seconds and one third on the 2000 World Cup tour, she successfully defended her points title in moguls and finished second in the duals standings. She also won the 2000 Goodwill Games duals and was second in singles.
Becky Hammon – Basketball
NCAA All-American
Average attendance at CSU home games was 751 when Becky arrived on campus as an unknown in 1995.
Four years later, that average was 4,234. The 72,392 season home attendance almost doubled the total for the 10 years before the unheralded 5 foot-6 point guard from Rapid City, South Dakota lofted her first collegiate 3-pointer. And the Rams, in their first-ever Top 25 appearance, were ranked fourth in the nation behind hoopster mills like Purdue, Tennessee and Louisiana Tech.
Quickly bridging her obscurity gap, the Western Athletic Conference sharpshooter capped an all-everything debut season as WAC Freshman-of-the-Year and then became the first sophomore named WAC Player of the Year as well as the first CSU player of either gender to eclipse 1,000 points in 50 games. She would be WAC Player of the Year two more times.
Reaching 1,849-points, she became CSU’s all-time leading scorer as a junior. At 2,543-points, she passed Utah’s Keith Van Horn to become the WAC’s all-time leading scorer (male or female) and finished her career with a remarkable 2,740 total points, a number 7 national ranking and 13 more WAC and CSU all-time records for points, field goals, 3-pointers, free throws, assists and steals.
En route, she earned Kodak, AP, Women’s Basketball News Service and Sports Illustrated First Team All-America honors, was named Frances Pomeroy Naismith (National) Player of the Year, selected for the USA Basketball R. William Jones Cup Team and chosen Player of the Week 15 times.
Becky went on to play summer-season pro ball with the WNBA’s New York Liberty, which advanced to the finals of the 1999 league championships.
Libbie Hickman – Running
World Championship Marathon Medalist
The Fort Collins runner got off to a fast start, winning the four-mile Kansas City Trolley Run with a time eclipsing the American record set by Francie Larrieu 14-years earlier.
On Memorial Day, she took on another 14-year challenge and became the first American woman to win the premier 6.2-mile Bolder Boulder race since Ellen Hart in 1983.
Everywhere she competed the 32-year-old speedster outdistanced the pack, winning another 10-kilometer event in Wichita, Kansas, a 5K in Riverside, California and the Colorado Run in her hometown. Onward she ran to a National Championship for the 5,000-meter distance and seventh place at the World Track Championships with a career-best time.
At year-end, the “Colorado Comet” was declared Female Road Racer of the Year by the Road Runners Club of America, Women’s Long Distance Runner of the Year by the USA Track and Field Association and Amateur Athlete of the Year by the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame. Her wreath of laurels also included induction into the CSU Hall of Fame and a No. 5 world ranking by Running Times magazine.
She had another good year in 1998, winning the U.S. Half Marathon Nationals and U.S. National 10K and was the No. 1 American woman (No. 6 finisher) in the New York City Marathon.
Amy Van Dyken – Swimming
Olympic Champion - 4 Gold Medals
Next to her constant battles with asthma and frequent detours for medical attention, the stroke of fate which most influenced Amy’s meteoric rise from promising prepster to World-elite mermaid, was her 1993 transfer from the University of Arizona to Colorado State University.
By 1994, she was a 19-time All-America, WAC Female Athlete of the Year, National Collegiate Champion, American record-holder in the 50-yard freestyle and NCAA Division I Swimmer of the Year and 1994 was not yet over.
In her first venture overseas, Amy captured three World Championship medals and set an American record in Rome. She then won her sprint specialty at the U.S. Open and made the United States National Team.
The lean 6-footer gave an even more spectacular performance in 1995, bettering the American short-course mark for the 50-yard freestyle, twice eclipsing the American and U.S. Open records for the 50-meter freestyle and successfully defending her U.S. National freestyle title.
After establishing a world short-course standard for the 50 butterfly in Finland, winning three golds and silver in the Pan-American Games and bringing home two golds and silver from the Pan-Pacific Championships, she was #1 in the World and Swimming Magazine’s 1995 Swimmer of the Year. But her greatest glory, however, was yet to come.
In the 1996 Summer Games at Atlanta, Amy won four gold medals, more than any woman ever had collected in a single Olympiad. But she still wasn’t ready to retire. Overcoming an injured shoulder, the Sportswomen of Colorado hall of Famer swam on to silver in the 1998 World meet.
Amy Van Dyken – Swimming
Pan Pacific Swimming Champion
Next to her constant battles with asthma and frequent detours for medical attention, the stroke of fate which most influenced Amy’s meteoric rise from promising prepster to World-elite mermaid, was her 1993 transfer from the University of Arizona to Colorado State University.
By 1994, she was a 19-time All-America, WAC Female Athlete of the Year, National Collegiate Champion, American record-holder in the 50-yard freestyle and NCAA Division I Swimmer of the Year and 1994 was not yet over.
In her first venture overseas, Amy captured three World Championship medals and set an American record in Rome. She then won her sprint specialty at the U.S. Open and made the United States National Team.
The lean 6-footer gave an even more spectacular performance in 1995, bettering the American short-course mark for the 50-yard freestyle, twice eclipsing the American and U.S. Open records for the 50-meter freestyle and successfully defending her U.S. National freestyle title.
After establishing a world short-course standard for the 50 butterfly in Finland, winning three golds and silver in the Pan-American Games and bringing home two golds and silver from the Pan-Pacific Championships, she was #1 in the World and Swimming Magazine’s 1995 Swimmer of the Year. But her greatest glory, however, was yet to come.
In the 1996 Summer Games at Atlanta, Amy won four gold medals, more than any woman ever had collected in a single Olympiad. But she still wasn’t ready to retire. Overcoming an injured shoulder, the Sportswomen of Colorado hall of Famer swam on to silver in the 1998 World meet.
Amy Van Dyken – Swimming
World Championship Medalist
Next to her constant battles with asthma and frequent detours for medical attention, the stroke of fate which most influenced Amy’s meteoric rise from promising prepster to World-elite mermaid, was her 1993 transfer from the University of Arizona to Colorado State University.
By 1994, she was a 19-time All-America, WAC Female Athlete of the Year, National Collegiate Champion, American record-holder in the 50-yard freestyle and NCAA Division I Swimmer of the Year and 1994 was not yet over.
In her first venture overseas, Amy captured three World Championship medals and set an American record in Rome. She then won her sprint specialty at the U.S. Open and made the United States National Team.
The lean 6-footer gave an even more spectacular performance in 1995, bettering the American short-course mark for the 50-yard freestyle, twice eclipsing the American and U.S. Open records for the 50-meter freestyle and successfully defending her U.S. National freestyle title.
After establishing a world short-course standard for the 50 butterfly in Finland, winning three golds and silver in the Pan-American Games and bringing home two golds and silver from the Pan-Pacific Championships, she was #1 in the World and Swimming Magazine’s 1995 Swimmer of the Year. But her greatest glory, however, was yet to come.
In the 1996 Summer Games at Atlanta, Amy won four gold medals, more than any woman ever had collected in a single Olympiad. But she still wasn’t ready to retire. Overcoming an injured shoulder, the Sportswomen of Colorado hall of Famer swam on to silver in the 1998 World meet.
Jill McGill – Golf
NCAA Champion and LPGA Rookie of the Year
Jill’s 6-foot frame is not the only reason people look up to her. Several top universities tried to snare her golf talent but the University of Southern California won the recruiting war. Pursuing a degree in business, she was named a Second Team All-America in her sophomore year.
The summer of 1993 was Jill’s season to remember. In June, she reached the semifinals of the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links Championship at Jackson Hole (WY) Golf and Tennis Club. At the Broadmoor Ladies Invitational in July, she again was a semifinalist, losing only to the eventual champion. But the piece de resistance came in August at the San Diego Country Club in California when she won the 93rd U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship and donned the most coveted crown in women’s amateur golf.
As the reigning Amateur champion, the USC senior received an automatic berth in the 1994 U.S. Women’s Open Championship. She also was named to the U.S. team for Curtis Cup play matching the eight best U.S. amateur players against their counterparts from Britain and Ireland.
Awarded her LPGA card in 1998, Jill currently is playing on the professional tour.
Gigi Fernandez – Tennis
Olympic Gold Medalist in Doubles
The four-year Western Slope resident also was ecstatic over the 7-5, 2-6, 6-2 women’s doubles conquest she and Mary Jo Fernandez (no relation) engineered over their host nation opponents, Arantxa Sanchez Vicario and Conchita Martinez.
Playing before the King and Queen of Spain and trailing 1-0 in the third set of the championship match, the U.S. duo refocused their attack and won every game after Gigi held serve in the crucial fifth game for a 3-2 lead.
1992 was indeed a zenith year for doubles specialist who, combined with Natalia Zvereva, successfully defended at the French Open, captured her first All-England (Wimbledon) crown and reclaimed the U.S. Open title she had held in 1988 and 1990.
Puerto Rico’s first female professional athlete was a late bloomer. Not until she received a scholarship from Clemson University at age 18 did she appreciate her parents’ gift of lessons a decade earlier.
She was more than appreciative after the 1992 bonanza of three Grand Slam titles, an Olympic Championship, a trio of Virginia Slims tournament victories and berths on the U.S. Federation and Wightman Cup teams.
Colorado’s internationally acclaimed adopted daughter and Zvereva went on to a fourth consecutive Grand Slam doubles title at the Australian Open early in 1993. The last athlete to sweep four straight Grand Slam events and an Olympic gold medal was Steffi Graf in 1988.
Gigi retired from professional competition in 1997.
April Heinrichs – Soccer
World Cup Champion
Few women have had a greater opportunity to make an impact on their sport than April, who in November 1991, in China, led the United States to victory in the first-ever FIFA Women’s World Cup tournament.
The 2-1 final-round triumph over Norway marked the first time Americans of either sex or any age level had won an international competition in soccer. It also represented 20-years of patience and preparation for the 27-year-old team captain from Colorado whose zeal was instrumental in the milestone achievement.
Serving as liaison between players and coach, April assumed responsibility for team morale and scored five critical goals during the round-robin tournament, despite playing on a still-tender, surgically repaired knee.
As a teenager, the 5-foot-4 dynamo was an All-State, All-America standout at Heritage High School and a three-year national age group competitor with a Colorado all-star team.
At the University of North Carolina, she was a four-time All-America, two-time Collegiate Player of the Year, all-time leading scorer and set the NCAA career scoring record for women with 225 points. After leading her Tar Heels team to three NCAA championships, she was dubbed “Female Soccer Player of the Decade” by a leading sports magazine.
Named to the U. S. National Team in 1985, April spent the next five years honing her leadership skills around the world, laying down a blueprint for that pinnacle 1991 moment in Canton. She also played two years professionally in Italy.
Now head soccer coach at the University of Maryland, the Sportswomen Hall of Famer heads the Olympic Development Program for Women in Maryland and is the first woman instructor for the National Soccer Coaches Association of America.
Just when we thought April Heinrichs couldn’t possibly become a bigger star, she did. Ever since she won 2 state soccer championships at Heritage High School, followed by 3 NCAA championships at the University of North Carolina and her glory days with the U.S. National Team she has been doing just that, becoming a bigger and brighter star.
This 3-time college All-American was the lead scorer on the team when the United States won the World Cup in 1991 and wrapped up an unprecedented playing career with an astounding 38 goals in 47 games.
Jill Trenary – Figure Skating
World Champion
In the best free skating performance of her illustrious career, Jill sealed a second straight U.S. title,
capturing top honors for the third time in four years. Dazzled judges awarded one perfect 6.0 and fourteen 5.9s to the first Broadmoor Skating Club member since Peggy Fleming to reign as America’s ice queen.
Advancing to world competition for the fourth year in a row, Jill came from behind at Halifax, Nova Scotia, to claim her first World Championship after settling for bronze in 1989.
In the summer, she finished second in the Goodwill Games in Seattle. At year-end, she was one of 10 finalists nominated for the Amateur Athletic Union’s coveted Sullivan Award.
The CU-Colorado Springs student and Cheyenne Mountain honor roll graduate, also was the “Readers’ Choice” of Skating magazine subscribers based on sportsmanlike behavior and performance. Few had forgotten the champion’s courageous comeback from the brink of career-threatening disaster after her left leg was severed to the bone during a 1985 practice session.
Jill retired from amateur competition and was inducted into the Sportswomen of Colorado Hall of Fame after the memorable 1990 campaign. She had represented our state around the world since migrating from Minneapolis to Colorado Springs in 1984. During that period, in addition to her National and World accolades, she collected one gold and four silver medals in international invitationals, placed fourth in the Olympic Games and twice was runner-up in the North American Championships.
She went on to a successful professional career with Stars on Ice and is married to British Olympic ice dance champion Christopher Dean. The couple welcomed their first child in 1999.
Ceal Barry and University of Colorado Lady Buffs – Basketball
NCAA Final Four Appearance
1989 Winner
Ceal Barry and University of Colorado Lady Buffs – Basketball
NCAA Final Four Appearance
The upgrade formula was known too—three 20-win seasons, a Big Eight championship, consecutive appearances in the NCAA Tournament, “believing” players and a mentor like former University of Kentucky basketball/field hockey standout Ceal Barry to make it all happen.
Finishing the 1988-89 regular season with a perfect 14-0 record, the 9th ranked Lady Buffs became the first Big Eight team ever to go undefeated in conference play. Their triumph in the postseason Big Eight tournament was the first in 20 years of CU basketball history and th
eir string of 20 straight wins was just one game short of the school’s all-time longest win streak in any sport. At the end of her most successful season since migrating from Cincinnati to Boulder in 1983, Barry owned a school-best and personal-best 27-4 slate and was 1989 Big Eight Coach of the Year. It was indeed a year to remember, especially when she later was named assistant coach for the 1996 U. S. Women’s Olympic basketball team.
MEMBERS OF THE 1989 CU TEAM
Crystal Ford—Big Eight Tournament MVP
Debbie Jacobson
Sherrice King
Benita Martin
Ros Starks
Tracy Tripp
Jen Tubergen
Annan Wilson
Cheryl Woodford
Coach Barry now serves on the Sportswomen of Colorado Advisory Board.
Kirsten Hanssen – Triathlon
Ironman World Champion
and the only U.S. athlete to win both the Nationals and the Grand Prix Cumulative Points Series two years in a row. In 1987 alone, she had earned more than $100,000 in prizes and endorsements.
Continuing her torrid pace in 1988, the 1987 Triathlete of the Year upset the defending champion in the Mountain Man Winter Triathlon and won the $105,000 America’s Paradise spectacular.
She seemed invincible until tendonitis struck both of her knees.
By June, she was back in the winner’s circle, but then in July, an auto/bicycle accident left her with two broken wrist bones, a skinned side and an arm cast to wear for the rest of the year.
With her hopes for National and Grand Prix three-peats sidelined, the 26-year-old Coloradan called upon her towering inner strength to overcome the injuries and regain her No. 1 status. Winning five more short-course races, she managed to finish a close second in both the year-end points standings and Triathlete of the Year polls.
The highlight of Kirsten’s tireless endeavor, however, was her October debut in the Ironman Triathlon in Hawaii. Although handicapped by her cast in the first two events, she still finished third in the women’s final standings—just two minutes off the course record with an overall time of 9 hours, 37 minutes, 35 seconds for 2.4 miles of swimming, 112 miles of bicycling and 26.2 miles of running. She trailed only the 1986 and 1987 winners and was the No. 1 American woman and 63rd finisher among all participants in the famed three-part endurance test.
Priscilla Welch – Running
New York City Marathon Champion
In the Summer Games at Los Angeles, her sixth-place 2:28.54 clocking was a British record for the 26.2-mile distance. The time remained the late-bloomer’s personal best until May 1987 when she astonished the universe with a World Masters record only seven women of any age had eclipsed. The stunning 2:26:51 performance in her third London Marathon attempt was second only to overall winner Ingrid Kristiansen’s pace, just six seconds off the World open standard and nearly an hour faster than her inaugural 1980 effort.
In November 1987, the transplanted Brit padded her credentials with one of the world’s most famous titles. Running in the 26th marathon of her then 8-year-old career, she surpassed a world-class field with an unchallenged 2:30:17 to become the oldest female champion in the history of the New York City Marathon.
Priscilla’s still based in Boulder, where she and her ex-military husband/coach moved in 1985. Her emphasis now is on shorter distances but her enthusiasm hasn’t waned.
Yolanda Johnson – Track
National Champion
She was the fastest prep hurdler in the nation in 1985 with an All-America time of 13.60 seconds for 100 meters. She had nine national hurdles rankings, three of them No. 1, and 100 scholarships offers.
But 1986 was even better. Ten of her 11 high hurdles races in 1986 eclipsed the 13.60 of 1985 and one 13.25-second clocking made her No. 2 on the all-time prep list as well as the year’s No. 1 All-America. When she also recorded the fastest low hurdles time for 100-meters with a 13.06 at the Colorado High School Track and Field Championships, she was an unbeatable pick for National High School Woman Athlete of the Year.
In 1985, she was happy to be on The Athletics Congress and Pan-American National Junior teams. In 1986, she owned the TAC and Pan-Am Junior titles and was picked, in addition, for the All-USA Track Team.
Highlights dotted her sensational 1986 campaign. At the Albuquerque Invitational early in the year, she successfully defended her 60-yard hurdles crown by upsetting world record holder Stephanie Hightower and NCAA champion Rhonda Blanford. In the National Indoor Championships at Madison Square Garden, she finished third behind Hightower and the leading East German.
Governor Dick Lamm proclaimed June 25 as Yolanda Johnson Day. The Colorado Sports Hall of Fame named her Amateur Athlete of the Year and Sportswomen of Colorado inducted this Sportswoman of the Year into its Hall of Fame. Yo-Yo went on to a record-setting, All-America collegiate career at the University of Colorado where she now is a successful assistant track coach known by her married name, Yolanda Hall.
Rhonda Blanford – Track
NCAA Champion
Serving notice she was still in the chase for Seoul in 1988, the former Aurora Central standout
captured her fourth consecutive Big Eight indoor hurdles crown with a 1985 world-best clocking of 7.44 seconds, the third-best time ever for 60 meters. She then added NCAA honors with a 7.57.
Switching from six barriers indoors to 10 outdoors, the Cornhusker team captain kicked up her pace, annexing five 100-meter invitational titles in five different states before donning the Big 8 crown. En route, she set a Nebraska school record and left three Olympians in her dust.
Rhonda’s victorious 12.70-second time in the NCAA Outdoor Finals was the fastest-ever by an American but was ruled wind-aided. Onward she went to The Athletics Congress (TAC) Nationals and a 12.85 triumph that not only was the fastest by an American in 1985 but also 9th fastest in the world. Completing her itinerary was a winning National Sports Festival stop and command performances in Japan and Germany as No. 1 hurdler on the USA Team.
She’s now Rhonda Blanford-Green, but her agenda remains the same. Since leaving Nebraska, where she was undefeated in Big Eight indoor and outdoor hurdles, the SWC Hall of Famer has given Olympic and NCAA clinics at home and abroad, coached volleyball and track and field, taught coaching theory and currently is an assistant commissioner with the Colorado High School Activities Association.
Connie Carpenter Phinney – Cycling
Olympic Gold Medalist
By 1977, the determined redhead had converted hard work into almost every major title in women’s cycling, including the U.S. National Road Racing championship.
She was the dominant woman in her sport in 1982. Claiming a third straight Coors Classic title, third consecutive World silver medal, top honors in the seven-race Self Series and a second silver medal in the U. S. National Time Trials, the perennial national medallist received the Southland Olympic Award as Best Female Cyclist in America. In 1982, she also moved permanently to Boulder.
Typical of the 11-time National champion’s style was her decision to withdraw from the final two days of the 1984 Red Zinger/Coors Classic to rest and mentally prepare for the week away Olympiad. Having won four of the seven stages to that point, she was on target for a fourth Coors crown.
The decision was validated in Los Angeles when her 12-year gap in Olympic appearances was bridged with the ultimate road racing gold in the Summer Games debut of women’s cycling. Her victory ended a 72-year drought for U.S. cycling teams who last won an Olympic medal in 1912.
Connie and her Olympic cyclist husband, Davis, have two children. In their free time, they run cycling camps. She also writes children’s books and serves on the Sportswomen of Colorado Advisory Board.
Karen Beer – Gymnastics
NCAA Champion
Karen’s league and conference performances twice led the Pioneers to the AIAW Division II National Gymnastics Championships. Her prestigious all-around victory in the 1982 meet helped DU win its first national title in gymnastics and heralded her parallel triumphs in three of four individual event finals…uneven bars, floor exercise, and balance beam. In the 1983 Nationals, she again won Division II all around laurels while the team successfully defended its title. En route to repeat crowns for uneven bars and balance beam, she qualified for Division I Nationals and proved with a tie for second on bars that she was top-notch anywhere.
With a full year of eligibility remaining, Karen chose to remain on campus as a business and accounting graduate student to help her gymnastics team make the transition from Division II to Division I competition, a transition in which her own athletic achievements played a major role.
The Pioneer pacesetter, now Karen Beer Cannon, is a certified public accountant in Jefferson County.
Connie Carpenter – Cycling
World Champion
By 1977, the determined redhead had converted hard work into almost every major title in women’s cycling, including the U.S. National Road Racing championship.
She was the dominant woman in her sport in 1982. Claiming a third straight Coors Classic title, third consecutive World silver medal, top honors in the seven-race Self Series and a second silver medal in the U. S. National Time Trials, the perennial national medallist received the Southland Olympic Award as Best Female Cyclist in America. In 1982, she also moved permanently to Boulder.
Typical of the 11-time National champion’s style was her decision to withdraw from the final two days of the 1984 Red Zinger/Coors Classic to rest and mentally prepare for the week away Olympiad. Having won four of the seven stages to that point, she was on target for a fourth Coors crown.
The decision was validated in Los Angeles when her 12-year gap in Olympic appearances was bridged with the ultimate road racing gold in the Summer Games debut of women’s cycling. Her victory ended a 72-year drought for U.S. cycling teams who last won an Olympic medal in 1912.
Connie and her Olympic cyclist husband, Davis, have two children. In their free time, they run cycling camps. She also writes children’s books and serves on the Sportswomen of Colorado Advisory Board.
Evergreen High School Girls' Volleyball Team
State Champions
She is into doing things that have never been done before. For example, you might not know that there is a world record for Highest Altitude Ski Descent, but there is and in 1998 she broke it.
Okay, maybe she’s not so typical. When she tells you she’s off to compete in a race she is not talking about a lOK—try the Leadville lOO-mile run. Or if she says she’s going to take a hike don’t hold dinner. To her, that could mean a 3-month trek along the Continental Divide.
And when our 2002 Sportswoman of the Year conquered the Divide, she also raised $20,000 for the Food Bank of the Rockies. When she climbed the world’s highest mountain, afterwards, she gave a slide show to help raise money for children with disabilities. Then she started a learning program aimed at teaching kids about reaching their highest goals. In fact, she’s a volunteer and fundraiser of the highest order-for causes that run the gamut from feeding the hungry to the protecting the environment.
Ellen climbed all of Colorado’s fourteeners in short order and after that, she moved onto climbing just about any summit she could find-from volcanoes in Mexico to granite spires in the Alps. Her list of mountains summated—in addition to Rainer, Kilimanjaro, and Denali—includes the likes of Cotopaxi and Chimborazo in Ecuador, Mt. Elbrus in Russia and Aconcagua in Argentina. And that’s just the beginning of a very long list.
In short, she’s an athlete who does the impossible. For example, when she climbed Everest from the north side, she did something no American woman had ever done before. And when she turned around and did it from the south side that made her the only woman—the one and only woman—to ever reach the summit of Mt. Everest twice in the same year.
She is an athlete like no other, and a Colorado Sportswoman in every sense of the word.
Tanya Haave – Basketball
NCAA All-American
In her final season of prep basketball, Tanya sparked the Cougars to third-place at State and set four state-tournament scoring records. Included in her output was a “perfect 100” single game free throw percentage! With season averages of 26.8 points,
5.1 assists and 13 rebounds per game, she topped the all-state and all-state tournament teams for the third year in a row and was “Player of the Year” for the second straight time.
Not surprisingly, she made the high school all-America lists of Parade Magazine and the National High School Coaches Association and also was selected for the 1980 All-America Prep Girls and All-America Academic teams.
Tanya got off to an equally fast collegiate start! In her freshman season of AIAW volleyball, she eclipsed the Tennessee school spiking record with 38 in one match, had the best serving efficiency rating on the varsity squad, led all the statistical categories and made the all-Southeast Conference and all-Region 11 teams. She still holds the UT records for kills and kill attempts.
With a full-ride scholarship for basketball, she zeroed in on it! A three-year starter and team co-captain in her senior year, the productive 6-2 forward propelled the Lady Vols to three Final Fours and two title games, graduating as UT’s all-time career scoring leader and “Player of the Game” for 1984’s NCAA title match.
Punctuating her undergraduate years were berths on a gold medal National Sports Festival Team, Junior National Team and National Jones Cup Team. The 1983 Sportswomen Hall of Fame inductee also was a Pan Am finalist and Olympic Trials selectee.
Since 1985, Tanya has been playing professional basketball in Italy and France, where she is a six-time All-Star and two-time scoring champion. She’s currently coaching in Sweden.
Lou Piel – Softball
National Champion Coach
Practice paid off in 1979 as the University of Northern Colorado’s junior pitching ace lit up the scoreboard with 155 strikeouts, a 0.52 earned runs average and an 18-2 won-loss record.
Leading UNC’s Division I team to the Region VII championship and a third straight berth in the College World Series, the star hurler was named to the all-conference team for the third year in a row and was a “Top Ten” player at the national competition.
Five no-hitters, 17 shutouts, a 48-7 won-loss record and a career ERA of 0.05 illuminated her three-year collegiate marquee, and a string of equally impressive American Softball Association (ASA) credits boosted her selection for the first-ever U.S. Women’s Pan-American Games softball team tryouts.
The talented 6 footer also received all-America designation from both the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) and the ASA, and was nominated for the AIAW Broderick Award presented annually to the nation’s most outstanding female athlete.
The 1979 achievement of which she is proudest, however, was her 1-0 win over the world champion Raybestos Brakettes as pitcher for the silver medalist Law Equipment of Greeley team at National Sports Festival 11 in Colorado Springs. The previously invincible Brakettes were eight-time ASA titleholders!
Subsequently, Lou pitched for the USA teams in the 1981 Tri National Championships in Japan and the 1982 World Championships in Taiwan. She spent an illustrious four years as head softball coach at the University of South Carolina, which was ranked in the Top 10 nationally throughout her tenure, but now is an insurance administrator.
Mary Decker – Track
World Record Holder
The transplanted Californian, who set three indoor track records by age 16, refuted those who said she was a burned-out teenage sensation after her hopes for the 1976 Montreal Olympics were dashed by what was diagnosed then as a shin splint problem. She opened her 1978 campaign at the Los Angeles Times Indoor Games by shattering her own world record for 1,000 meters. Less than a week later, she won her ninth straight distance event by taking the Toronto Star Maple Leaf 1,500-meter run with five yards to spare.
Unbeaten in four middle-distance races, she was the New York Track Writers Association selection for outstanding female athlete of the indoor season.
Before leaving for summer competition in Europe, the new University of Colorado standout set another record in the 10,000- meter Peachtree Road Race in Atlanta and placed third in the National AAU 800-meter run in Los Angeles.
In September, she won the 10,000-meter AAU/Diet Pepsi road racing title in New York. Wearing CU colors in October, she captured individual honors over Kent-Denver’s 5,000-meter course for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) Cross-Country Championship.
ln between, she posted the third-best time of the year for the 880-yard run and anchored a mile relay foursome to the year’s fourth-best time. Not bad for a “burnout”!
Mary, who turned 40 in 1999, continues to compete. Her career, which eventually did encompass the Olympics, is still a work in progress.
Jayne Gibson – Volleyball
National Champion
After being named to the all-league and all-state teams, she was voted the most valuable player in the state tournament. The Colorado Sidelines awarded her player of the year, and Jayne was named the best hitter/blocker in the RMAAU qualifying tournament in Boulder.
This multi-lettered sports competitor also excelled as a sprinter, hurdler and high jumper on Arvada West’s Class AAA state championship track and field team. She ran the second leg on the record setting 440-yard foursome.
Then, of course, she somehow found the time and energy to play basketball. She led the Wildcats into the state championships in 1977. Jayne will certainly remember 1977 as her own Super Bowl year of accomplishments.
Debbie Willcox – Gymnastics
NCAA Champion
Obviously a quick learner, she already was a Top 10 finisher in the Elite Class of U.S. Gymnastics Federation competition and had competed with the fourth-place U.S. team in the 1975 Pan-American Games.
At the 1976 Summer Games in Montreal, however, the Littleton High School senior played a major role in upgrading her nation’s international gymnastics image by finishing 10 places higher than any previous U.S. gymnast in Olympic competition. Against the best gymnasts the world had to offer, at the peak of their competitive form, Debbie scored a 9.6 on vault, 9.5 on floor exercise, 9.45 on uneven parallel bars and 9.25 on balance beam for an 18th-place, 37.80-point all-around total in a history making competition pitting the traditionalist Russians against the new-school Romanians.
The meet at the Montreal Forum, which marked the demise of Olga Korbut and ascendancy of Nadia Comaneci, will be remembered not only as the first to record a perfect 10.0 Olympic score, but also the first to showcase a consistently competitive U.S. performance.
Debbie got to Montreal by placing fourth in individual Olympic qualifying and winning a U.S. vs. Canada dual-meet all-around title in Olympic team qualifying. In addition to her Olympic accomplishments, the 17-year-old won the 1976 South Africa Cup championship, finished third behind Nadia and another Romanian in the all-around standings of a qualifying meet at Tucson, repeated as USGF national uneven bars champion and maintained her Top 10 status in Elite Masters national competition.
Dorothy Hamill – Figure Skating
World Champion
Between 1969 and 1975, Dorothy won 15 major competitions, including the 1969 National Novice Ladies Championship, the 1971 International Grand Prix in St. Gervais, France, and the 1971 Nebelhorn Trophy in Oberstdorf, West Germany. She captured North Atlantic Regional and Eastern Sectional titles in 1972 and was first in the Richmond (London) Trophy and Prague Skate Invitationals as well.
The former Colorado Academy student, who trained at the Colorado Ice Arena in Denver through most of her amateur career, prevailed over all competitors in the 1974 and 1975 United States Senior Ladies Figure Skating Championships and was World silver medalist both years. Her place in international figure skating history was assured in 1976, however, when she garnered a third consecutive U.S. crown, claimed the World title at Gothenburg, Sweden, and struck Olympic Gold at Innsbruck, Austria.
Women across the country rushed to salons to acquire the Dorothy Hamill look and skaters everywhere tried to emulate the Hamill Camel spin. No one ever did either as well as Dorothy Hamill, who went on to professional stardom with Ice Capades.
Cindy Hill – Golf
Amateur Champion
In 1974, Cindy won the revered USGA Women’s Amateur Championship, played on the winning Curtis Cup Team, played on the winning World Cup Team and captured the World Cup individual title! She also was Broadmoor Invitational runner-up.
The Curtis Cup appointment was the second of four the University of Miami grad would receive over an eight-year span. Largely on the basis of their finishing play over the San Francisco Golf Club course, the 1974 team prevailed 13-5 for an eighth straight U. S. triumph in the biennial matches with Great Britain.
The third time was the charm for Cindy in the National Amateur. After settling for runner-up honors in 1970 and 1972, she carded an encouraging one-over-par 73 in the stroke-play qualifying round, just three shots off the medal pace.
She then advanced with relative ease through four days of stroke play at the Broadmoor Golf Course in Seattle and upset defending U.S. and British titleholder Carol Semple of Pennsylvania, 5 and 4 in the 36-hole finale. The new champion played the final 14 holes two-under-par and never was down in the title match of the 74th annual competition.
Getting off to another fast start in the 22-nation World Amateur Team tournament at La Romana, Dominican Republic, in October, Cindy turned in the best opening-day score on the rain- and wind swept Cajuiles Country Club course, a two over-par 76. Her low one-under-par 73 on closing day sealed her cumulative individual title and gave the defending U. S. team a 620 four-day total, 16 strokes below deadlocked Great Britain and South Africa.
For encores, the former school teacher won the Doherty Cup, North and South Amateur and South Atlantic Amateur tournaments in 1975 and followed with a few years on the professional women’s tour. She now resides in Florida.
