Collegiate Outdoor Athletes Of The Year — Jaydon Hibbert & Julien Alfred

No collegiate dashwoman has sprinted faster than Alfred at the NCAA. Undefeated Hibbert set a TJ CR and won a national title. (KIRBY LEE/IMAGE OF SPORT)

A PAIR OF CARIBBEAN ISLANDERS have emerged as T&FN’s Outdoor Collegiate Athlete Of The Year award winners for ’23. Jamaican triple jump ace Jaydon Hibbert of Arkansas was the top man and St. Lucia speedster Julien Alfred of Texas was the top woman.

Hibbert, just an 18-year-old frosh, was undefeated during the campaign, wrapping things up by winning the NCAA title with the No. 3 collegiate performance ever. He had earlier raised the Collegiate Record by a foot with his 58-7½ (17.87) win at the SEC.

Honorable mention to Leo Neugebauer of Texas, who crushed the CR in the decathlon, Ky Robinson of Stanford, who scored a 5K/10K double at the NCAA, and Mykolas Alekna of Cal, who destroyed the discus CR as part of a campaign that saw him produce the 4 longest marks ever and 7 of 10.

As for Alfred, she sewed things up with a busy final day at the NCAA by winning the 100 and 200. Her times of 10.72w (twice) and 21.73w were faster than any other collegian has ever run under all conditions. Our AOY honors are individually based, so she got no extra credit for being on the winning 4×1 which set a CR in the semis.

Honorable mention to Florida’s Jasmine Moore, with an NCAA TJ win and LJ 3rd, Britton Wilson of Arkansas, who set a pair of CRs in the 400 and moved to No. 3 on the all-time 400H list, and 100H CR-setter Masai Russell of Kentucky.

The all-time winners, since we began this award in ’95 (women are listed with the last name they were using at the time):

Year Men’s AOY Women’s AOY
2023 Jaydon Hibbert (Arkansas) Julien Alfred (Texas)
2022 Trey Cunningham (Florida State) Abby Steiner (Kentucky)
2021 JuVaughn Harrison (LSU) Athing Mu (Texas A&M)
2020 (none)
2019 Grant Holloway (Florida) Sha’Carri Richardson (LSU)
2018 Michael Norman (USC) Maggie Ewen (Arizona State)
2017 Fred Kerley (Texas A&M) Raevyn Rogers (Oregon)
2016 Jarrion Lawson (Arkansas) Courtney Okolo (Texas)
2015 Shawn Barber (Akron) Jenna Prandini (Oregon)
2014 Trayvon Bromell (Baylor) Courtney Okolo (Texas)
2013 Derek Drouin (Indiana) Brianna Rollins (Clemson)
2012 Cam Levins (Southern Utah) Brianne Theisen (Oregon)
2011 Ngoni Makusha (Florida State) Sheila Reid (Villanova)
2010 Ryan Whiting (Arizona State) Queen Harrison (Virginia Tech)
2009 Galen Rupp (Oregon) Jenny Barringer (Colorado)
2008 Richard Thompson (LSU) Sally Kipyego (Texas Tech)
2007 Walter Dix (Florida State) Natasha Hastings (South Carolina)
2006 Xavier Carter (LSU) Ginnie Powell (USC)
2005 Kerron Clement (Florida) Monique Henderson (UCLA)
2004 Alistair Cragg (Arkansas) Sheena Johnson (UCLA)
2003 Daniel Lincoln (Arkansas) Sanya Richards (Texas)
2002 Justin Gatlin (Tennessee) Lashinda Demus (South Carolina)
2001 Janus Robberts (SMU) Brianna Glenn (Arizona)
2000 Gábor Máté (Auburn) Seilala Sua (UCLA)
1999 Terrence Trammell (South Carolina) Suziann Reid (Texas)
1998 Angelo Taylor (Georgia Tech) Amy Skieresz (Arizona)
1997 Robert Howard (Arkansas) Tiffany Lott-Hogan (BYU)
1996 Ato Boldon (UCLA) Tonya Williams (Illinois)
1995 John Godina (UCLA) Diane Guthrie-Gresham (George Mason)