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| [[2008]] || [[Tim Hutten]] || [[UC Irvine]] || [[Courtney Mathewson]] || [[UCLA]]
 
| [[2008]] || [[Tim Hutten]] || [[UC Irvine]] || [[Courtney Mathewson]] || [[UCLA]]
 
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(Source: USA Water Polo<ref name=USAWP>USA Water Polo: [http://usawaterpolo.org/index.php?pr=050407_CutinoFinalists PETER J. CUTINO AWARD FINALISTS ANNOUNCED] Retrieved [[2007-08-08]]</ref>)
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(Source: USA Water Polo<ref name=USAWP>USA Water Polo: [http://usawaterpolo.org/index.php?pr=050407_CutinoFinalists PETER J. CUTINO AWARD FINALISTS ANNOUNCED] Retrieved [[2007-08-08]])
 
   
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Latest revision as of 11:43, 26 March 2010

Background

Insights

File:Cutino trophy.jpg

The Cutino Trophy (photo courtesy of the Olympic Club)

The Peter J. Cutino Award, named after former college water polo player and legendary UC Berkeley coach Peter J. Cutino, is considered the most prestigious individual award in American collegiate water polo. It is given annually to the top male and female player in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).

History

The award was first presented in 1999 by the Trustees of the Olympic Club of San Francisco.[1] The Club, founded in 1860 to support amateur athletics in the Bay area, is America's oldest athletic club.[2] Nominees for the Cutino Award are selected by the Division I water polo coaches.[1] These coaches vote for three players as nominees, none of which can be members of their own team. The eventual winner is voted on again by the same coaches, who now rank the nominees and can vote for members of their own teams. The Olympic Club, which tabulates the votes, does not release the number of votes to avoid manipulation of the totals. Each winner receives a brass and walnut trophy, and the perpetual trophy is on display at the Olympic Club of San Francisco.

Originally the award was announced after the end of both the men's (December) and women's (May) college seasons. Former major league baseball commissioner and US Olympic Committee chair Peter Ueberroth, himself once a water polo player at San Jose State, presented the first awards on January 22, 2000. The 2001 women's winner, Coralie Simmons, was presented with her award almost a year after her season had ended because the Trustees decided to change the cycle to coincide with the academic year. Thus in June 2002, Simmons won the 2001 award, while Brenda Villa received the 2002 women's Cutino at the same ceremony. The nominees are now announced each spring, before the end of the women's NCAA water polo season, but well after the men's season ends in December of the prior year. The award ceremony is held at an Olympic Club facility in San Francisco, shortly after the Women's NCAA Championship is decided.

2008 Nominees

The men's nominees for the Ninth Annual Cutino Award were Adam Shilling from USC, Mike Sharf from UC Berkeley and Tim Hutten from UC Irvine. The 2007 women's finalists were Lauren Silver from Stanford and Jillian Kraus & Courtney Mathewson from UCLA.[3] The winners, Hutten and Mathewson, were announced at the Peter J. Cutino Awards Night Dinner held Saturday, June 7, 2008 at The Olympic Club’s City Clubhouse, located at 524 Post Street in San Francisco. Water polo Olympian Maureen O’Toole-Purcell was the keynote speaker.[4]

Peter J. Cutino Award winners

Year Men's Winner School Women's Winner School
1999 Bernice Orwig USC
2000 Sean Kern UCLA Aniko Pelle USC
2001 Sean Kern UCLA Coralie Simmons UCLA
2002 Tony Azevedo Stanford University Brenda Villa Stanford University
2003 Tony Azevedo Stanford University Jackie Frank Stanford University
2004 Tony Azevedo Stanford University Moriah van Norman USC
2005 Tony Azevedo Stanford University Natalie Golda UCLA
2006 Juraj Zatovic USC Lauren Wenger USC
2007 John Mann University of California, Berkeley Kelly Rulon UCLA
2008 Tim Hutten UC Irvine Courtney Mathewson UCLA

(Source: USA Water Polo<ref name=USAWP>USA Water Polo: PETER J. CUTINO AWARD FINALISTS ANNOUNCED Retrieved 2007-08-08)

External links

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Cutino Chronicles[1] Retrieved 2007-08-08
  2. The Olympic Club: History Retrieved 2007-08-08
  3. NCAA.com: Template:Citation
  4. The Olympic Club of San Francisco: Template:Citation