1990-Greg Lewis UW All-American Running Back
| 1991-Steve Emtman UW All-American Defensive Lineman
A consensus All-American, Emtman won the Outland Trophy, Lombardi Award, was the Bill Willis Award winner and the UPI Lineman of the Year. He was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2006. He played six seasons as a defensive lineman in the NFL. |
1992-Edgar Martinez Mariners and AL Batting Champ
Martinez spent his entire 18-year MLB career with the Seattle Mariners. He is one of only eight players with 300 home runs, 500 doubles, a career batting average higher than .300, a career on-base percentage higher than .400 and a career slugging percentage higher than .500.
| 1993-Randy Johnson Mariners Pitching Ace
Johnson was a dominant force during his tenure in Seattle. Over a 21-year career he has won the Cy Young Award five times, second only to Roger Clemens' seven. |
1994-Napoleon Kaufman Husky Rushing Champion
Kaufman is still the University of Washington’s all-time leader in rushing yards (4,106), rushing attempts (735), most 100-yard games (17), 200 yard games (4) and rushing touchdowns (34). Kaufman went on to a six year NFL career. | 1994-Rhonda Smith UW Center and Scoring Champion |
1995-Chris Gobrecht UW Women's Basketball Coach
During her 11 years (1986-96) at Washington, she compiled a 243-89 record and became the winningest coach in Washington history. She led the Huskies to nine NCAA Tournament berths, three conference championships, and four second-place league finishes. | 1995-Lou Piniella Seattle Mariners Manager
Piniella presently ranks 14th all-time on the list of managerial wins. From 1993–2002 he managed the Seattle Mariners, winning the AL Manager of the Year Award in 1995 and again in 2001 when he led the Mariners to a record-tying 116 wins. |
1996-Alex Rodriguez AL Batting Champion
Considered one of the best all–around baseball players, Rodriguez was the youngest player ever to hit 500 home runs. Being a 12-time AL All-Star, 3-time AL MVP, and 10-time AL Silver Slugger Award are just a few of his many achievements.
| 1996-Michelle Akers Olympic Soccer Champion A former leading American soccer player, Akers played in the historic 1999 Women's World Cup victory by the US. She is a member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame. |
1997-Gary Payton SuperSonics All-Star
Payton played 12 years with the Seattle Supersonics. He is the only point guard ever to win the NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award and was selected to the NBA All-Defensive First Team nine times. | 1997-Kate Starbird College Basketball Player of the Year A former professional basketball player in the WNBA, Starbird was awarded the Women's Naismith College Player of the Year Award while at Stanford University. |
1998-David Segui Mariners Fielding Star
Segui played for the Seattle Mariners from 1998-1999. | 1998-Karen Thorndike World Solo Sailor Originally from Snohomish, Washington. In 1996, at age 56, Thorndike became the first American woman to sail around the world and successfully solo-navigate around the five "Great Capes." |
1999-Becky Newbry UW Softball All-American
In her 4 seasons with the Huskies she helped UW to 4 College World Series appearances and 2 national runner-up finishes. She left Washington with her name in the Huskies top ten in 14 offensive categories and more notably as the 1999 Pac 10 Batting Co-Champion. | 1999-Marques Tuiasosopo UW Quarterback and MVP
In 1997 Tuiasosopo was the Huskies' first true freshman to start a game at quarterback. As a senior in 2000, he led the Huskies to the Pac-10 title and a 34-24 Rose Bowl victory over the Purdue Boilermakers. He was also named the MVP of the game. |