UK’s Gaines nominated for NCAA Woman of the Year

Published 2:51 pm Tuesday, July 19, 2022

NEWS RELEASE

The University of Kentucky Athletics Department has nominated alumnae swimmer Riley Gaines for the 2022 NCAA Woman of the Year award, following a career that featured three individual conference titles, a pair of Southeastern Conference records, 12 All-America nods and summa cum laude honors.

Riley Gaines

“This award recognizes not only athletic performance, but also academics, service and character, so to be thought of as someone who embodies all of those things is extremely humbling,” Gaines said. “I’m aware I was up against a department full of amazing female student-athletes, so I’m very grateful and always proud to be a Wildcat. I have so much love for UK and Big Blue Nation.”

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NCAA member schools have nominated 577 female college athletes from the three divisions for the 2022 NCAA Woman of the Year award. Next, conference offices will select their nominees for NCAA Woman of the Year, which will be announced in mid-August.

Conference nominations are forwarded to the NCAA Woman of the Year selection committee, where they will identify the top 10 honorees in each of the three NCAA divisions. From the top 30, the NCAA Woman of the Year selection committee will determine the top three honorees in each division as the nine finalists. The NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics then will choose the 2022 NCAA Woman of the Year, who will be named this fall.

“I am thrilled about this news,” said head coach Lars Jorgensen. “Riley is a super hard worker in everything that she does, always giving 100 percent in the classroom, in the community and in the pool. She was a highly competitive student-athlete during her four years at Kentucky, and she has left a lasting impact on our program.”

Gaines graduated summa cum laude last May, earning a degree in human health sciences with a minor in advocacy. She earned a spot on the Dean’s List all eight semesters at Kentucky, and the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll four times. She has landed on the SEC Academic Honor Roll the past four years and is a three-time College Swimming & Diving Coaches Association of America Scholar All-America First Team selection.

The Gallatin, Tennessee, native was tabbed the 2022 SEC Women’s Swimming and Diving Scholar-Athlete of the Year, becoming the fourth Wildcat to win the award in program history. It also marked the fourth time in the last eight years a member of the UK women’s swimming and diving team has won it.

Gaines also has a track record of community service, being named the 2022 SEC Brad Davis Community Service Leader of the Year for having been involved in programs such as God’s Pantry, Special Olympics of Kentucky, Give 10 (R.E.A.L. Read), the Shriner’s Hospital and Amachi during her time in Lexington. She also participated in the Kentucky United Telethon, which raised more than $3 million for the American Red Cross to help tornado victims.

The three-time individual conference champion’s accomplishments in the pool are just as impressive as they are out of the water. A two-time team captain, Gaines graduated as one of the most decorated swimmers in program history. She owns the school record in three individual events and four relay events, is a multi-time U.S. Olympic Trials qualifier and was instrumental in UK winning its first-ever SEC team title in 2021. She has also amassed 12 All-America honors throughout her four-year career in the blue and white.

She tied for fifth in the 200 free at the 2022 NCAA Championships, marking the highest individual finish of her career at the national meet, while also garnering honorable mention recognition in the 200 fly, 400 medley relay and 800 free relay. She found herself on the All-SEC First Team for the second season in a row after bringing home two gold, one silver and two bronze medals at this year’s conference meet. Gaines’ performances in all three of her individual races at the SEC Championships set new program standards, while her winning time of 1:51.51 in the 200 fly was a meet and conference record and moved her up to the 16th-fastest swim in U.S. history.

Kentucky has produced one NCAA Woman of the Year in the award’s 31-year history, with former swimmer Asia Seidt earning the title in 2020 from a record 600-plus candidates.