2024
Napheesa Collier: The Lynx star made an impact across women’s basketball, winning a gold medal, leading her team to the WNBA Finals and co-founding Unrivaled, a new 3-on-3 league.
2023
Jessie Diggins: The former Olympic gold medalist from Afton was the first American to collect 16 World Cup victories and also the first to win a world title in an individual cross-country ski race.
2022
Justin Jefferson: The third-year Vikings wide receiver developed into a bona fide superstar, launching himself into record books and imaginations with a combination of grit, grace and the Griddy.
2021
Suni Lee: The gymnast from St. Paul, the first Hmong American to make an Olympic team, came home from the Tokyo Olympics with three medals, including a gold for winning the all-around competition.
2020
Eric Kendricks: The All-Pro Vikings linebacker turned his private work into public activism after the killing of George Floyd.
2019
Nelson Cruz: The veteran slugger, at age 39, brought clout to the Twins on the field and in the clubhouse, leading the Bomba Squad to 101 wins and a major league record 307 home runs, including 41 of his own.
2018
Maggie Nichols: The Little Canada native dominated the NCAA gymnastics championships as Oklahoma’s star — three months after courageously revealing herself as “Athlete A,” the first source in the USA Gymnastics sexual-abuse scandal.
2017
Cheryl Reeve: The coach behind the united, thoughtful and powerful Lynx led the franchise to its fourth WNBA title in seven years.