
Moll, Stevenson Take West Region Honors
June 19, 2026 | Track & Field
SEATTLE – Junior Husky pole vault champion Amanda Moll, and one of her coaches, Toby Stevenson, were both honored as best in the West Region by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association. They will both now be up for national award consideration.
Earlier this week, Moll also won Big Ten Women's Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year.
After missing most of the indoor season, Moll was back in top form when it mattered most at the end of the outdoor season, setting the new NCAA Outdoor Record while winning the NCAA title on June 11 at Hayward Field in Eugene. Moll was named the co-winner of the West Region Women's Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year, along with Alyssa Jones of Stanford, the NCAA long jump champion.
Stevenson earns Women's Outdoor Assistant Coach of the Year after his group was responsible for all 28 points that the women's team scored at NCAAs, resulting in a seventh-place team finish. Along with Amanda Moll, Hana Moll took second in the pole vault for eight points, and Sofia Cosculluela won the first heptathlon NCAA title in UW history for another 10 points.
Stevenson, working along with coaches Tim Reilly and Jesse Chapman, coached four Husky NCAA pole vault qualifiers, as UW took one-third of the total spots out of the West Region in that event. Senior Sara Borton went on to take ninth at NCAAs and freshman Veronica Vacca was 15th.
Cosculluela led the NCAA during the regular season with a heptathlon score of 6,093 points, then improved upon that at NCAAs with a School Record of 6,182 points.
This is the fourth time Stevenson has been named USTFCCCA West Region Women's Assistant Coach of the Year, and the second in a row outdoors. He has won the honor in 2020 indoors, 2023 indoors, and 2025 and 2026 outdoors.
For news, scores, highlights and more, download the Go Huskies app on your mobile device. Follow @UWTrack on Instagram, X, and Facebook and subscribe to UW Athletics on YouTube for the latest on the Dawgs.
Earlier this week, Moll also won Big Ten Women's Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year.
After missing most of the indoor season, Moll was back in top form when it mattered most at the end of the outdoor season, setting the new NCAA Outdoor Record while winning the NCAA title on June 11 at Hayward Field in Eugene. Moll was named the co-winner of the West Region Women's Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year, along with Alyssa Jones of Stanford, the NCAA long jump champion.
Stevenson earns Women's Outdoor Assistant Coach of the Year after his group was responsible for all 28 points that the women's team scored at NCAAs, resulting in a seventh-place team finish. Along with Amanda Moll, Hana Moll took second in the pole vault for eight points, and Sofia Cosculluela won the first heptathlon NCAA title in UW history for another 10 points.
Stevenson, working along with coaches Tim Reilly and Jesse Chapman, coached four Husky NCAA pole vault qualifiers, as UW took one-third of the total spots out of the West Region in that event. Senior Sara Borton went on to take ninth at NCAAs and freshman Veronica Vacca was 15th.
Cosculluela led the NCAA during the regular season with a heptathlon score of 6,093 points, then improved upon that at NCAAs with a School Record of 6,182 points.
This is the fourth time Stevenson has been named USTFCCCA West Region Women's Assistant Coach of the Year, and the second in a row outdoors. He has won the honor in 2020 indoors, 2023 indoors, and 2025 and 2026 outdoors.
For news, scores, highlights and more, download the Go Huskies app on your mobile device. Follow @UWTrack on Instagram, X, and Facebook and subscribe to UW Athletics on YouTube for the latest on the Dawgs.
Players Mentioned
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