NEW ORLEANS (USBWA) – Kentucky forward Oscar
Tshiebwe, an elite rebounder, a unanimous All-American
and the Southeastern Conference Player and Defensive Player of the
Year with a prolific double-double average, has been named the winner
of the Oscar Robertson Trophy as the National Player
of the Year as selected by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association.
The 6-9 junior from Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of
the Congo is Kentucky's second Oscar Robertson Trophy winner, joining
Anthony Davis in the 2011-12 season and just the third from an SEC school.
LSU's Pete Maravich is the only other SEC player to win the award,
earning it in back-to-back seasons (1968-69 and 1969-70).
The announcement came today at a press conference at the Caesars
Superdome, site of the men's Final Four. Tshiebwe
will be formally recognized at the USBWA's College Basketball Awards
on Monday, April 11 at the Missouri Athletic Club in St. Louis.
He will be joined in St. Louis by Aliyah Boston, the Ann Meyers
Drysdale Award winner as the women's national player of the year,
national coaches of the year Tommy Lloyd of Arizona (Henry Iba Award)
and South Carolina's Dawn Staley. The two national freshman players
of the year will be honored as well, Jabari Smith of Auburn (Wayman
Tisdale Award) and Aneesah Morrow of DePaul (Tamika Catchings Award).
Tshiebwe leads the nation in rebounding with 15.1
per game and led the Wildcats in scoring with 17.4 points per game.
He is the USBWA's District IV Player of the Year and a First Team
USBWA All-American, the Wildcats' first first-teamer since forward
Willie Cauley-Stein in 2015. Tshiebwe is the first Division I player
to average at least 15 points and at least 15 rebounds since Drake's
Lewis Lloyd and Alcorn State's Larry Smith each did during the 1979-80
season, and the first within Kentucky's storied history to achieve
it since Bob Burrow tallied 19.1 points and 17.7 rebounds per game
in 1954-55.
He will likely become just the fourth player to earn the USBWA's
National Player of the Year honor while leading the nation in rebouding,
joining Ohio State's Jerry Lucas – twice the national leader and
a two-time winner in the 1960-61 and '61-62 seasons – along with
Wake Forest's Tim Duncan (1996-97) and Oklahoma's Blake Griffin (2008-09).
"The things that he's done haven't been done for 50 years,"
Wildcats head coach John Calipari said. "Let me say this again,
the things that he's done haven't been done for 50 years. He plays
his heart out and finds ways to impact every game. I'm proud of
him, and it's not only on the court. He's so thankful and faith-based
and he's a joy to coach."
He is the second player coached by Calipari to earn the Oscar
Robertson Trophy. Marcus Camby won it in the 1995-96 season at UMass
with Calipari as his coach.
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Tshiebwe |
The West Virginia transfer showed to be an elite rebounder from
the start this season, grabbing 20 boards in his Kentucky debut against Duke
in the season opener. Six weeks later he set a Rupp Arena record
with 28 rebounds in a win over Western Kentucky, a feat not seen
at UK since 1969 and one that earned him the USBWA's Oscar Robertson
National Player of the Week. He had another 20 boards the next game
in the SEC opener against Missouri – the 48 rebounds tied for the
most over a two-game span by any Division I player over the last
25 seasons, according to ESPN Stats & Info.
Tshiebwe pulled in at least 10 boards in 32 of 34 games including
21 straight at one point. He finished the season with 16 straight
double-doubles, the longest streak since complete game-by-game rebounding
records were kept at UK dating back to 1969. His 28 double-doubles
are a new Kentucky single-season record and his 515 total rebounds
make him only the third player in UK history to top the 500 mark
in a season. Taking away team rebounds, Tshiebwe grabbed 41.2 percent
of all of the Wildcats' rebounds this season.
A complete player on both ends, Tshiebwe also showed his defensive
skills as the only major conference player to average at least 1.6
blocked shots and 1.6 steals per game during the regular season,
leading the Wildcats in both categories.
Tshiebwe was a unanimous All-American as determined by the four
major awarding organizations: the USBWA, Associated Press, NABC
and The Sporting News.
Earlier today, South Carolina's Aliyah Boston was named the
winner of the Ann Meyers Drysdale Award as the women's national
player of year, which marks just the third time both national
players of the year have come from the same conference. The ACC
claims both of the previous pairings. The two SEC standouts this
season join South
Carolina head coach Dawn Staley when she won the then-national player
of the year at Virginia in the 1991-92 season as Christian
Laettner was earning the Oscar Robertson Trophy at Duke. The
second and previous occasion came in 2005-06 when North
Carolina's Ivory Latta and Duke's J.J. Redick (a co-winner
with Gonzaga's Adam Morrison) earned the top national honors.
The Oscar Robertson Trophy is voted on by the
entire membership of the association, which consists of more than
900 journalists. It is the nation's oldest award. "The Big
O" won the USBWA's first two national player of the year awards
in 1959 and '60 and was the consensus national player of the year
as a sophomore at Cincinnati in 1958, the year before USBWA
began presenting its player of the year award. The USBWA renamed the award
the Oscar Robertson Trophy in 1998.
The U.S. Basketball Writers Association was
formed in 1956 at the urging of then-NCAA Executive Director Walter
Byers. With some 900 members worldwide, it is one of the most influential
organizations in college basketball. It has selected an All-America
team since the 1956-57 season. For more information on the USBWA and its award
programs, contact executive director Malcolm Moran at 814-574-1485.
For additional info about covering the awards banquet, contact Jim
Wilson with the MAC (314-539-4488).
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