
The University of Washington has won the inaugural Allstate Big Ten Women’s Championship Series, marking a significant milestone for Huskies’ women’s sports and the conference.
According to the Big Ten, Washington garnered 113.2 points, just squeezing out the victory over UCLA (112), and the top five teams were rounded out by Michigan (105.6), USC (104.4) and Ohio State (100.8).
The Allstate Big Ten Women’s Championship Series translates women’s team performances into points in a year-long competition. The series also included expanded sponsorship opportunities from Allstate, which became a title sponsor of the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament and a presenting sponsor of several other women’s sports, including soccer, gymnastics and softball.
Related: Game Changers: Allstate Big Ten Women’s Championship Series to Elevate Women’s Athletics
“Winning is in the DNA of Washington. Having success across the board is something that’s critically important to us,” said Washington athletics director Pat Chun. “We take an extraordinary amount of pride in winning this Allstate Women’s Championship award, and being the inaugural winners, especially because the Big Ten conference is so difficult across the board in all sports. This is a league that historically has prioritized women’s sports and is at the current peak of women’s college sports, and for us to be able to win this, it’s really hard to articulate but we take an immense amount of pride in winning this. All of our teams will celebrate this, the way our department is wired this is really a statement about everybody at UW.”
The University of Washington’s women’s teams won both the Big Ten regular-season and tournament title in soccer and rowing on their way to securing the Allstate Championship Series title. The Huskies also secured top-five spots in cross country, tennis, softball and both indoor and outdoor track and field.
The Huskies also celebrated eight teams placing in the top-25 in national championships in 2025-26 school year, including soccer, rowing, and track and field.































