Hillsdale’s Christina Sawyer Conference Nominee for NCAA Woman of the Year

8.16.21

Official NCAA Announcement

INDIANAPOLIS –
Hillsdale College multisport student-athlete Christina Sawyer was selected to represent the Great Midwest Athletic Conference as the league’s nominee in consideration of the 2021 NCAA Woman of the Year Award.
 
The initial pool of 535 nominees from institutions all across the NCAA was narrowed down to 153 college athletes following an official announcement on Monday afternoon.
 
Established in 1991, the NCAA Woman of the Year award is rooted in Title IX and recognizes graduating female college athletes who have exhausted their NCAA eligibility and distinguished themselves in academics, athletics, service and leadership throughout their collegiate careers.
 
The nominees represent student-athletes from 18 different sports spanning all three NCAA divisions. Of those nominated, 57 nominees competed in Division I, 36 are from Division II and 60 are in Division III.
 
Conferences are permitted to recognize (2) nominees if at least (1) is a woman of color or international student-athlete. All nominees who compete in a sport not sponsored by their school’s primary conference, as well as associate conference nominees and independent nominees, were placed in a separate pool to be considered by a selection committee. Three nominees from the pool were selected to move forward in the process with the conference nominees.
 
The Woman of the Year Selection Committee, made up of representatives from the NCAA membership, will now choose the Top 30 honorees — 10 from each division — from the conference-level nominees. The Top 30 honorees will be announced in September. The selection committee will determine the top three honorees in each division from the Top 30, and the nine finalists will be announced this fall. From those nine finalists, the NCAA Committee on Women's Athletics then will choose the 2021 NCAA Woman of the Year.
 
Sawyer is the second Charger in a row to represent the Great Midwest for NCAA Woman of the Year consideration after former teammate Arena Lewis was selected in the 2020 award process.
 
She was a two-time G-MAC Champion in track and field, winning the 5,000m run at the G-MAC Indoor championships in both 2019 and 2020, with a best time of 17:15.15, and she placed eight times in G-MAC track and field championship meets, helping the Chargers win indoor conference titles in both 2020 and 2021.

Sawyer also was a critical part of Hillsdale's success on the cross country course. She earned three All-G-MAC honors in cross country, including a first-team honor in 2020 thanks to a seventh-place finish (22:07.4) in the 6,000m championship race, and twice earned All-Midwest Region honors.

The Tecumseh, Michigan native helped Hillsdale reach and competed in three consecutive NCAA Division II Cross Country National Championship meets, with a top finish of 67th (22:08.4) in 2017. Only the Covid-19 pandemic and the resulting cancelation of the fall 2020 NCAA Division II championships kept her from making a fourth-straight appearance.

In the classroom, Sawyer was just as impressive, if not moreso, during her time at Hillsdale. She graduated in the spring of 2021 with a 3.99 GPA as her class' salutatorian, and was the recipient of the Trout Award, presented annually to an outstanding Hillsdale College senior to help assist with graduate studies.

During her time at Hillsdale, she was named the 2017-18 Organic Chemistry Student of the Year, the 2018-19 College Physics Student of the Year, and earned the Sophomore Woman High Achievement Award from the Lamplighters organization in 2018-19. She was also a two-time USTFCCCA Academic All-American, and a two-time Hillsdale President's Scholar Athlete Award Recipient.

In the summer of 2019, Sawyer spent 10 weeks at an internship at the Van Andel Research Institute in Grand Rapids, investigating the binding of WD Repeat protein domains to the histone protein tails. Her research concluded with a presentation to Van Andel Research Institute faculty and staff on her findings, and later became the basis of a thesis Sawyer wrote and presented at Hillsdale College in 2020.
Sawyer also spent five weeks in the summer of 2020 working with Dr. Kelli Kazmier of Hillsdale College, developing Elongation Factor G protein mutants for examination with EPR spectroscopy.

Although school and athletics kept her busy during her time at Hillsdale, Sawyer also made time to be an active volunteer, working with Hillsdale Hospice from 2018 to 2020, Hillsdale Hospital from 2019 to 2020 and Bread of Life food pantry in the spring of 2021.