The Bowerman Awards

The Bowerman: Women's April Watch List

The Bowerman: Women's April Watch List

Apr 16, 2015 by FloTrack Staff
The Bowerman: Women's April Watch List

NEW ORLEANS – Two SEC field-eventers replaced a vaulter and two northern distance runners on the first Watch List for the Bowerman Trophy – collegiate track & field’s highest individual honor – of the 2015 outdoor season.

The Bowerman Watch List Committee announced the list on Thursday afternoon.

The Bowerman Women’s April Watch List

(Click student-athletes’ names for biographies & notes)

         
NAME YEAR SCHOOL EVENTS HOMETOWN
Remona Burchell SR Alabama Sprints Montego Bay, Jamaica
Natoya Goule RS SR Clemson Mid-Distance Clarendon, Jamaica
Kendra Harrison SR Kentucky Hurdles Clayton, N.C.
Kyra Jefferson JR Florida Sprints Detroit, Mich.
Sandi Morris SR Arkansas Pole Vault Greenville, S.C.
Courtney Okolo JR Texas Sprints Carrollton, Texas
Keturah Orji FR Georgia Jumps Mount Olive, N.J.
Jenna Prandini RS JR Oregon Sprints/Jumps Clovis, Calif.
Shelbi Vaughan JR Texas A&M Throws Mansfield, Texas
Kendell Williams SO Georgia Combined Events Marietta, Ga.
 
Also Receiving Votes: Demi Payne (Stephen F. Austin), Raven Saunders (Southern Illinois), Jeanelle Schepper (South Carolina), Irena Sediva (Virginia Tech), Emily Sisson (Providence)
 
Next Women’s Watch List: Thursday, May 6

Keturah Orji of Georgia and Shelbi Vaughan of Texas A&M both opened their outdoor seasons with nation-leading marks in their events.

Orji exactly matched her mark that got her second at NCAA indoors in the triple jump: she won the Spec Towns Team Invite with a hop, skip, and a jump of 13.77m (45-2¼), which makes her the No. 2 U.S. junior performer ever.

Vaughan won the Texas Relays with a discus throw of 61.48m (201-8). That’s eighty-three centimeters better than what she opened up with at Texas last year, and exactly four meters better than everyone else in the collegiate ranks right now.

That duo replaced Leah O’Connor, Emily Sisson, and Demi Payne on the Watch List. (Two women are replacing three because the last edition of the List featured an irregular 11 women.)

Sandi Morris is the only woman on the Watch List that has broken a collegiate record this outdoor season. The Arkansas pole vaulter cleared a winning height of 4.62m (15-1¾) at the Razorbacks’ home John McDonnelly Invitational. She already cleared 4.66 meters indoors, so expect more updates in this space.

Along with Morris, Vaughan, and Orji, four more women  on the WL are the collegiate leaders in their respective events.Remona Burchell, Kendra Harrison, Kyra Jefferson, and Natoya Goule all won their races in blazing fast times at the Florida Relays; all except for Goule hail from the SEC (though she is formerly of LSU).

Burchell, of Alabama, won the 100 in Gainesville in 11.04 seconds into a 2.5 meters per second headwind; Harrison, of Kentucky, won the 400 hurdles there in 55.94; Jefferson, of Florida, won her home 400 in 51.50; and Goule ran the 800 in 2:01.63 to finish as the first collegian in Florida.

Burchell, Harrison, and Goule lead the descending order lists in those events by several tenths of a second, while Jefferson is tied for the collegiate lead in the 400.

Oregon’s Swiss Army knife Jenna Prandini has run the 4×100 twice and long jumped once so far this outdoor season. Her 6.41m (21-0½) long jump is tied for fourth on the collegiate descending order list, while the relay that she and three other Ducks ran in 43.31 is currently the third best in Division I.

Returning Bowerman Trophy Finalist Courtney Okolo of Texas and Kendell Williams of Georgia have competed scarcely thus far outdoors. Neither has hit their primary open event yet. Okolo ran a leg on the nation’s fastest 4×400 meter relay, as the Longhorns ran 3:29.65 to win at the Texas Relays. And Williams threw the javelin at Georgia Tech before missing her home heptathlon with a tooth infection. She’ll be back in the multis at the Drake Relays.

With her tenth appearance, Williams joins English Gardner and Sheila Reidin a three-way tie for the ninth most times making the Watch List.

Everyone on this this list has an NCAA title in their event in the last twelve months except for the precocious Orji.

In the last edition of the List, only Raven Saunders of Southern Illinois received votes but fell short of the top ten. She’s joined in that category today by Demi Payne (Stephen F. Austin), Jeanelle Schepper (South Carolina), Irena Sediva(Virginia Tech), and Emily Sisson (Providence). Payne and Sisson have previously appeared on the list, while this is the first Bowerman consideration for javelin thrower Sediva and high jumper Schepper.

The men’s Watch List was released Wednesday; the next women’s watch list comes out Thursday, May 6.