Home SportsBasketballPenn State’s Starocci, USC’s Watkins Named Big Ten Athletes of the Year

Penn State’s Starocci, USC’s Watkins Named Big Ten Athletes of the Year

by David Howell
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ROSEMONT, Ill. – Penn State University wrestler Carter Starocci has been selected as the 2024-25 Big Ten Conference Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year, and University of Southern California basketball guard JuJu Watkins has been recognized as the 2024-25 Big Ten Conference Female Athlete of the Year, the conference announced Thursday.

Starocci is the fourth Nittany Lion student-athlete to earn Big Ten Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year honors, joining gymnast Luis Vargas in 2005 and fellow wrestlers David Taylor and Bo Nickal in 2014 and 2019, respectively.

Starocci is also the 14th wrestling student-athlete chosen as Big Ten Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year, dating back to Iowa’s Ed Banach in 1983, and the first since Minnesota’s Gable Stevenson in 2022. Since 1983, wrestling student-athletes from four schools, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio State, and Penn State, have been recipients of the Big Ten Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year award.

Watkins becomes the first Big Ten Female Athlete of the Year award winner and the 11th basketball student-athlete to capture the honor

Other basketball recipients have included Purdue’s Joy Holmes (1991), MaChelle Joseph (1992), Stephanie White (1999) and Katie Douglas (2001), Penn State’s Kelly Mazzante (2004), Ohio State’s Jessica Davenport (2007), Minnesota’s Rachel Banham (2016), and Iowa’s Megan Gustafson (2019) and Caitlin Clark (2023, 2024).

Starocci capped his incredible career with an unprecedented fifth NCAA championship, the first and only wrestler in NCAA Division I history to become a five-time NCAA National Champion. The Erie, Pa. native’s championship victory closed a career that saw him go 25-0 in NCAA Tournament matches.

Starocci collected his third Big Ten title in 2025 after posting an unblemished 26-0 record, including 15-0 record in dual meets. A three-time All-Big Ten First Team performer, Starocci dominated his opponents, surrendering just 41 points in his 26 matches and claiming 10 victories by technical fall.

Starocci was also named the 2025 NCAA Championship Most Outstanding Wrestler, the 2025 Big Ten Wrestler of the Year, and a Hodge Trophy finalist while leading the Nittany Lions to the 2025 NCAA title, the program’s fourth consecutive championship.

Watkins was named the consensus National Player of the Year in 2024-25 after collecting six National Player of the Year honors. Watkins became the first USC player to receive the John R. Wooden Award and joined Cheryl Miller and Lisa Leslie to become the program’s third Naismith Trophy Award winner.

In 33 games last season, Watkins averaged 23.9 points, 6.8 rebounds, 3.4 assists, 2.2 steals, and 1.8 blocks per contest, while leading the Trojans to a 31-5 overall record, including 16-1 in the Big Ten and a berth in the Big Ten Tournament championship game. The sophomore from Los Angeles ranked third in the country in points per game and fourth in total points, while listing second in free throws made, free throws attempts, and field goals attempted.

The Big Ten Player of the Year, Watkins averaged 26.2 points, 7.3 rebounds and 2.4 blocks while shooting 35.4 percent from 3-point range against top-10 opponents and became the first basketball player at the Division I collegiate, WNBA and NBA levels since 2000 to score 38 points, 11 rebounds, eight blocks and five assists in a single game in leading USC to its win over then-No. 1 UCLA on Feb. 13.

Watkins also was named one of four finalists for the Honda Sport Award for women’s basketball by The Collegiate Women Sports Awards (CWSA) — her second selection as a finalist for the Honda Award — and was one of four finalists for the Wade Trophy.

Starocci and Watkins were among a high-powered field of 36 nominees (one male and one female per Big Ten school) that included 12 national champions, 32 All-Americans, 18 conference champions, 12 conference Players of the Year and eight standouts who collected at least one national player of the year accolade.

The Big Ten Conference has recognized a Jesse Owens Male Athlete of the Year since 1982 and first honored a Female Athlete of the Year in 1983. The Big Ten Athletes of the Year are selected by a panel of conference media members from nominations submitted by each institution.

The complete list of 2024-25 Athlete of the Year nominations, as well as the list of all-time winners for each award, can be found below.

2024-25 BIG TEN ATHLETE OF THE YEAR NOMINEES

SCHOOL

MALE NOMINEE

FEMALE NOMINEE

Illinois

Lucas Byrd, wrestling

Tacoria Humphrey, track & field

Indiana

Carson Tyler, swimming & diving

Anna Peplowski, swimming & diving

Iowa

Stephen Buchanan II, wrestling

Luci Olsen, basketball

Maryland

Derik Queen, basketball

Kori Edmondson, lacrosse

Michigan

Fred Richard, gymnastics

Savannah Sutherland, track & field

Michigan State

Isaac Howard, ice hockey

Gabrielle Stephen, gymnastics

Minnesota

Kostas Zaltos, track & field

Khyah Harper, soccer

Nebraska

Ridge Lovett, wrestling

Lexi Rodriguez, volleyball

Northwestern

 Nick Martinelli, basketball

Madison Taylor, lacrosse

Ohio State

Michael Adedokun, soccer

Makenna Webster, field hockey/ice hockey

Oregon

Dillon Gabriel, football

Kiara Romero, golf

Penn State

Carter Starocci, wrestling

Jess Mruzik, volleyball

Purdue

Braden Smith, basketball

Raven Colvin, volleyball

Rutgers

Kyle Monangai, football

Chloe Timberg, track & field

UCLA

Roch Cholowsky, baseball

Lauren Betts, basketball

USC

Ethan Hedges, baseball

JuJu Watkins, basketball

Washington

Logan Ullrich, rowing

Amanda Toll, track & field

Wisconsin

Jason Swarens, track & field

Casey O’Brien, ice hockey

BIG TEN JESSE OWENS MALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR AWARD WINNERS
1982 – Jim Spivey, Indiana, cross country/track & field
1983 – Ed Banach, Iowa, wrestling
1984 – Sunder Nix, Indiana, track & field
1985 – Barry Davis, Iowa, wrestling
1986 – Chuck Long, Iowa, football
1987 – Steve Alford, Indiana, basketball
1988 – Jim Abbott, Michigan, baseball
1989 – Glen Rice, Michigan, basketball
1990 – Anthony Thompson, Indiana, football
1991 – Mike Barrowman, Michigan, swimming
1992 – Desmond Howard, Michigan, football
1993 – John Roethlisberger, Minnesota, gymnastics
1994 – Glenn Robinson, Purdue, basketball
1995 – Tom Dolan, Michigan, swimming
1996 – Eddie George, Ohio State, football
1997 – Blaine Wilson, Ohio State, gymnastics
1998 – Charles Woodson, Michigan, football
1999 – Luke Donald, Northwestern, golf
2000 – Ron Dayne, Wisconsin, football
2001 – Ryan Miller, Michigan State, ice hockey
2002 – Jordan Leopold, Minnesota, ice hockey
2003 – Amer Delic, Illinois, tennis/Matt Lackey, Illinois, wrestling
2004 – Damion Hahn, Minnesota, wrestling
2005 – Luis Vargas, Penn State, gymnastics
2006 – Peter Vanderkaay, Michigan, swimming
2007 – Cole Konrad, Minnesota, wrestling
2008 – Brent Metcalf, Iowa, wrestling
2009 – Jake Herbert, Northwestern, wrestling
2010 – Evan Turner, Ohio State, basketball
2011 – David Boudia, Purdue, diving
2012 – Draymond Green, Michigan State, basketball
2013 – Derek Drouin, Indiana, track & field
2014 – David Taylor, Penn State, wrestling
2015 – Logan Stieber, Ohio State, wrestling
2016 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan State, basketball
2017 – Kyle Snyder, Ohio State, wrestling

2018 – Kyle Snyder, Ohio State, wrestling

2019 – Bo Nickal, Penn State, wrestling

2020 – Chase Young, Ohio State, football

2021 – Luka Garza, Iowa, basketball

2022 – Gable Steveson, Minnesota, wrestling

2023 – Zach Edey, Purdue, basketball

2024 – Zach Edey, Purdue, basketball

2025 – Carter Starocci, Penn State, wrestling

BIG TEN FEMALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR AWARD WINNERS
1983 – Judi Brown, Michigan State, track & field
1984 – Lisa Ishikawa, Northwestern, softball
1985 – Cathy Branta, Wisconsin, cross country/track & field
1986 – Stephanie Herbst, Wisconsin, cross country/track & field
1987 – Jennifer Averill, Northwestern, field hockey/lacrosse
1988 – Suzy Favor, Wisconsin, cross country/track & field
1989 – Suzy Favor, Wisconsin, cross country/track & field
1990 – Suzy Favor, Wisconsin, cross country/track & field
1991 – Julie Farrell-Ovenhouse, Michigan State, diving &Joy Holmes, Purdue, basketball
1992 – MaChelle Joseph, Purdue, basketball
1993 – Lara Hooiveld, Michigan, swimming
1994 – Kristy Gleason, Iowa, field hockey
1995 – Laura Davis, Ohio State, volleyball
1996 – Olga Kalinovskaya, Penn State, fencing
1997 – Kathy Butler, Wisconsin, track & field & Gretchen Hegener, Minnesota, swimming
1998 – Sara Griffin, Michigan, softball
1999 – Stephanie White-McCarty, Purdue, basketball
2000 – Lauren Cacciamani, Penn State, volleyball
2001 – Katie Douglas, Purdue, basketball
2002 – Christie Welsh, Penn State, soccer
2003 – Perdita Felicien, Illinois, track & field
2004 – Kelly Mazzante, Penn State, basketball
2005 – Jennie Ritter, Michigan, softball
2006 – Tiffany Weimer, Penn State, soccer
2007 – Jessica Davenport, Ohio State, basketball
2008 – Hannah Nielsen, Northwestern, lacrosse
2009 – Maria Hernandez, Purdue, golf
2010 – Megan Hodge, Penn State, volleyball
2011 – Shannon Smith, Northwestern, lacrosse
2012 – Christina Manning, Ohio State, track & field
2013 – Amanda Kessel, Minnesota, ice hockey
2014 – Dani Bunch, Purdue, track & field
2015 – Taylor Cummings, Maryland, lacrosse
2016 – Rachel Banham, Minnesota, basketball
2017 – Lilly King, Indiana, swimming

2018 – Lilly King, Indiana, swimming

2019 – Megan Gustafson, Iowa, basketball

2020 – Dana Rettke, Wisconsin, volleyball

2021 – Sarah Bacon, Minnesota, diving

2022 – Dana Rettke, Wisconsin, volleyball

2023 – Caitlin Clark, Iowa, basketball

2024 – Caitlin Clark, Iowa, basketball

2025 – JuJu Watkins, USC, basketball

The Big Ten Conference is an association of world-class universities whose member institutions share a common mission of research, graduate, professional and undergraduate teaching and public service. Founded in 1896, the Big Ten has sustained a comprehensive set of shared practices and policies that enforce the priority of academics in the lives of students competing in intercollegiate athletics and emphasize the values of integrity, fairness and competitiveness. The Big Ten Conference sponsors 28 official sports, 14 for men and 14 for women, and the broad-based programs of the 18 Big Ten institutions provide direct financial support for more than 14,000 student-athletes. For more information, visit www.bigten.org.

David Howell
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