The most prestigious award in collegiate track and field, The Bowerman Award, will be presented this Friday night (Dec. 15) at the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association convention in Phoenix, Ari., and for the fourth time since 2012, the Women of Oregon will be rooting for one of their own to take home the honor., a six-time NCAA champion and eight-time all-American for the Ducks who recently joined the professional ranks, is one of the three women's finalists for The Bowerman, joining Arizona State's Maggie Ewen and Georgia's Keturah Orji.The ceremony will begin at 6 p.m. PT, following a red carpet show at 5:20 p.m. The awards ceremony will be streamed live on Facebook Live at Facebook.com/TheBowerman, and the stream will be available to watch in the link below. FloTrack.org will stream the red carpet show at 5:20 p.m. as well as the awards ceremony. Fans can follow @OregonTF and @Run4Ducks on Twitter for photos and updates.Rogers closed out a tremendous career at Oregon with a phenomenal junior season in 2017, capturing NCAA individual titles in the indoor and outdoor 800 meters and running the final leg of the NCAA champion 4x400 relay team to clinch the NCAA Outdoor championship and the historic Triple Crown for the Women of Oregon. Rogers finished her career with five consecutive NCAA titles in the 800 meters (indoors and outdoors), and she was also a three-time Pac-12 champion in the 800 meters, securing her third straight in 2017.The 2017 USTFCCCA women's outdoor track athlete of the year, Rogers also played a part in rewriting the collegiate record books during her final season at Oregon. On April 15 at the Mt. SAC Relays, she ran a blazing 1:59.10 to break the 27-year-old collegiate record in the 800 meters. Prior to that, she helped the Women of Oregon break the collegiate record in the indoor distance medley relay in 10:48.80, as well as the outdoor sprint-medley relay. To cap her Oregon career, Rogers' final leg of the 4x400 at Hayward Field in June helped the Ducks break the collegiate record in 3:23.13 while making history with the national title and Triple Crown.One of three finalists for The Bowerman Award, Rogers already has a slight leg up after winning the fan vote in June.The Women of Oregon have won two of the last three Bowerman awards, with Laura Roesler winning in 2014 andtaking home the honor in 2015. Rogers' inclusion as a finalist marks the fourth time in the last six years that a UO woman has been a finalist.