Can I say "been awarded" instead of "won" here? Could you explain the difference between these two if there's any?

Native speaker’s answer
Rebecca
While it would sound natural to say "have been awarded", it would change the context from "have won" in relation to time and tenses! "Have been awarded" is the present perfect continuous tense, indicating that something began in the past and is still happening. So, this means the awards would be ongoing, given recently, or within a timeframe. Whereas "have won" is present perfect tense, meaning that something was true or happened in the past, at an unspecified time, and is still true in the present. Since she still has the awards, she could have originally been awarded them at any point in the past. Ex: I have been losing all my tennis matches this season. => Implying that the matches are still being lost. Ex: I have lost two tennis matches. => Implying that any two matches were lost