INDIANAPOLIS (USBWA) The U.S. Basketball
Writers Association is proud to announce the winners of
its three major individual women's awards. The honorees include
the NCAA's all-time triple-doubles leader, the coach of the top-ranked
team and a freshman sensation off the All-Southeastern Conference
team.
Sabrina Ionescu of Oregon is the winner of the
Ann Meyers Drysdale Award as the National Player
of the Year, Dawn Staley of South Carolina earned
the National Coach of the Year Award and
Aliyah Boston of South Carolina is the
Tamika Catchings Award winner as the National Freshman
Player of the Year, based on voting by the USBWA membership.
Longtime USBWA
representative Mel Greenberg coordinated the voting and
selection process.
The winners, normally feted at the Final Four, will be formally
recognized later this year. The presentation of each of the awards,
originally scheduled for the USBWA College Basketball Awards Dinner
hosted by the Missouri Athletic Club in St. Louis, has
been cancelled.
Ionescu, a 5-11 senior guard from Walnut Creek, Calif., is a
three-time USBWA All-American and three-time Pac-12 Player of the Year who
matched her NCAA single-season record with eight triple-doubles
to extend her all-time record for both women and men to 26. This
season, she became the first player in NCAA history to reach 2,000
career points (2,562), 1,000 assists (1,091) and 1,000 rebounds
(1,040). In addition, she led the nation with a career-high 9.1
assists per game while averaging 17.5 points and a career-high 8.6
rebounds per game; she was fourth nationally with a 3.05 assist-to-turnover
ratio. Ionescu ended her historic career by being named the Pac-12
Tournament Most Outstanding Player for the second time after averaging
23.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 9.0 assists per game in three contests,
headlined by a 31-point performance in the semifinals vs. No. 13
Arizona. The Ducks won both the Pac-12 regular season and tournament
titles in a 31-2 season that landed Oregon at No. 2 in the final
Associated Press poll.
"Sabrina Ionescu is one of the most well-rounded players
on both ends of the floor. Her leadership on and off the court stands
out, and her ability to make everyone around her better sets her apart,"
said the award's namesake Ann Meyers Drysdale. "She has grown
and developed her game every year, and I am disappointed that she
was not able to finish out her senior year and give her Oregon Ducks
a chance to win a national title. I am very proud to have Sabrina
receive the 2020 Ann Meyers Drysdale USBWA Player of the Year Award."
Staley, a two-time USBWA National Player of the Year winner for
Virginia in the 1990-91 and 1991-92 seasons, is the first woman
to win both the USBWA Player of the Year and Coach of the Year awards.
Her honor gives the SEC the national coach of the year award for
a second time in three seasons (Vic Schaefer of Mississippi State
in 2017-18).
Her Gamecocks won their final 26 games to finish the season 32-1
and ranked No. 1 in the final AP poll after winning both the SEC
regular-season and tournament titles. Staley, in her 20th season
as a head coach after one of the most decorated playing careers
in basketball history, has a 477-178 (.728) career mark, including
a 305-98 (.757) record in 12 seasons at South Carolina.
"There were a lot of great candidates but it is a thrill
on a personal level to see Dawn emerge as our winner," said
USBWA womens representative Mel Greenberg. "Having watched
her evolve from an initially reluctant coaching target of Temple
to quickly making the Owls nationally relevant and then build the
Gamecocks to a national force, we can now speak of her being one
of the younger members of the all-timers in her profession. That
said, to me she'll still be the magical point guard out of Philly's
Public League who went on to become a two-time USBWA player of the
year and on to being an Olympic gold medalist and WNBA All-Star."
"Coach Staley has created so many great opportunities for us
and showed us different ways to be great and successful in
life," South Carolina senior captain and third-team USBWA
All-American Tyasha Harris said, speaking for the team. "She is
deserving of this award because of how she pushes everyone to be
their best while, at the same time, showing how much she loves
us. She works just as hard as we do and never settles for less.
She is without a doubt our choice for coach of the year."
South Carolina's surge to the top of the poll was fueled by Boston,
the SEC Freshman and Defensive Player of the Year. For the third
straight season and the seventh time overall the SEC can boast the nation's best first-year
player (Chennedy Carter, Texas A&M and Rhyne Howard, Kentucky).
The second-team USBWA All-American powered her way onto the national
stage in her college debut, becoming the first player in NCAA Division
I women's basketball history to post a triple-double in her first
career game. The 6-5 forward from St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
had 13 double-doubles, including seven against ranked opponents.
For the season, she averaged 12.5 points and 9.4 rebounds. The All-SEC
First-Team selection was sixth in the nation in field goal percentage
(.608) and 21st in blocks per game (2.61).
"I am so pleased to see Aliyah win the first Tamika Catchings
Award," said the award's namesake, now the General Manager
of the Indiana Fever of the WNBA."It has been fun watching
her growth and domination this year along with the accolades she
has collected. She's proven herself to be a strong defensive presence
along with developing an offensive arsenal that will only continue
to grow under coach Dawn Staley. This is an honor well deserved."
The USBWA has presented a women's national player of the year
award since the 1987-88 season and named the award in honor of Hall
of Famer Ann Meyers Drysdale in the 2011-12 season. The coach of
the year has been selected each year since the 1989-90 season and
the national freshman player of the year since the 1991-92 season.
This is the first season the award has been named for Tennessee
legend Tamika Catchings, who won the award in the 1997-98 season.
The U.S. Basketball Writers Association was
formed in 1956 at the urging of then-NCAA Executive Director Walter
Byers. Today, it is one of the most influential organizations in
college basketball. For more information on the USBWA and its award
programs, contact executive director Malcolm Moran at 814-574-1485.
Related link: •
All-time USBWA women's honors
ALL-TIME
ANN MEYERS DRYSDALE AWARD WINNERS (USBWA PLAYER OF THE
YEAR) |
1988 Sue Wicks, Rutgers 1989 Clarissa Davis, Texas
1990 Jennifer Azzi, Stanford 1991 Dawn Staley, Virginia
1992 Dawn Staley, Virginia 1993 Sheryl Swoopes, Texas
Tech 1994 Lisa Leslie, USC 1995 Rebecca Lobo,
Connecticut 1996 Saudia Roundtree, Georgia 1997
Kate Starbird, Stanford 1998 Chamique Holdsclaw,
Tennessee 1999 Chamique Holdsclaw, Tennessee 2000
Tamika Catchings, Tennessee 2001 Ruth Riley, Notre
Dame 2002 Sue Bird, Connecticut 2003 Diana Taurasi,
Connecticut 2004 Alana Beard, Duke |
2005 Seimone Augustus, LSU 2006 Ivory Latta, North
Carolina 2007 Candace Parker, Tennessee 2008 Candace
Parker, Tennessee 2009 Maya Moore, Connecticut
2010 Tina Charles, Connecticut 2011 Maya Moore, Connecticut
2012 Brittney Griner, Baylor 2013 Brittney Griner,
Baylor 2014 Breanna Stewart, Connecticut 2015
Breanna Stewart, Connecticut 2016 Breanna Stewart,
Connecticut 2017
Kelsey Plum, Washington
2018 A'ja Wilson,
South Carolina 2019 Megan Gustafson, Iowa
2020 Sabrina Ionescu, Oregon |
The award was named in honor of Ann Meyers Drysdale
in 2012 |
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