INDIANAPOLIS (USBWA) – Auburn forward
Jabari Smith, a dynamic big man who turned the
Tigers into one of the nation’s toughest matchups and helped lead
the Tigers to the Southeastern Conference regular-season title,
is the winner of this season’s Wayman Tisdale Award
honoring the National Freshman Player of the Year based on voting
by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. Smith
is Auburn’s first Tisdale Award winner and its first USBWA All-American
since 1998-99.
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Smith |
One of three freshman on the 2021-22 USBWA All-America team and
one of two second-teamers, the 6-10, 220-pounder from Fayetteville,
Ga., was the SEC’s Freshman of the Year averaging a team-leading
16.9 points per game and was on the All-SEC First Team. Smith was
a six-time SEC Freshman of the Week honoree.
Smith will formally receive the award at the upcoming USBWA College
Basketball Awards Banquet in St. Louis on April 11, hosted by the
Missouri Athletic Club.
Smith lead Auburn (28-6) to the its first outright regular-season
conference title since 1999 and its 11th NCAA Tournament appearance
and third of the last five seasons, earning a No. 2 seed, the second-highest
in program history. The Tigers captured a school-record 15 SEC wins
this season and had their first undefeated season (16-0) at home
in Neville Arena.
Smith is the first Auburn player to win a USBWA postseason award
in program history. Aside from Smith and teammate Walker Kessler,
a USBWA third-team All-American at center, only Chris Porter has
been named a USBWA All-American from Auburn, during the 1998-99
season. Smith and Kessler also made the USBWA’s All-District IV
team.
With 28 games in double figures and at least one three-pointer
in 28 consecutive games, Smith is fourth nationally in scoring among
freshmen at 576 total points. As Auburn surged into the NCAA Tournament
over the final eight regular-season games, he averaged 22.6 points
per game, shot 51.8 percent on three-pointers (28-of-54) and 82.8
percent from the foul line (48-of-58).
Against Jacksonville State in Auburn's NCAA first-round game,
Smith scored the most points ever by an Auburn freshman in an NCAA
Tournament game with a game-high 20 points and a career-high 14
rebounds. Smith added four assists and capped his day with a thunderous
highlight-reel dunk. His 14 rebounds were also the most by an Auburn
freshman in NCAA Tournament history. Auburn was eliminated by Miami
(Fla.) in the second round.
The last SEC player to earn the Wayman Tisdale Award was Ben
Simmons from LSU in 2015-16. Anthony Davis (Kentucky, 2012), John
Wall (Kentucky, 2010) and Chris Jackson (LSU, 1989 and the initial
winner) are other previous SEC winners.
The Wayman Tisdale Award is voted on by the
entire membership of the association. The USBWA has chosen a national
freshman of the year award since the 1988-89 season. It was named
the Wayman Tisdale Award in the 2010-11 season in honor of the late
three-time USBWA All-American at Oklahoma and the first freshman
to receive first-team All-America honors from the USBWA.
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).
ALL-TIME USBWA NATIONAL
FRESHMEN OF THE YEAR |
1989 Chris Jackson,
LSU 1990 Kenny Anderson, Georgia Tech 1991 Rodney Rogers, Wake Forest
1992 Chris Webber, Michigan 1993 Jason Kidd, California 1994 Joe Smith,
Maryland 1995 None selected 1996 None selected 1997 None selected
1998 Larry Hughes, Saint Louis 1999 Quentin Richardson, DePaul 2000
Jason Gardner, Arizona 2001 Eddie Griffin, Seton Hall 2002 T.J. Ford,
Texas 2003 Carmelo Anthony, Syracuse 2004 Luol Deng, Duke 2005
Marvin Williams, North Carolina |
2006 Tyler Hansbrough,
North Carolina 2007 Kevin Durant, Texas
2008 Michael Beasley, Kansas
State 2009 Tyreke Evans,
Memphis 2010 John Wall,
Kentucky 2011 Jared
Sullinger, Ohio State
2012 Anthony Davis, Kentucky
2013 Marcus Smart, Oklahoma
State 2014 Jabari Parker,
Duke 2015 Jahlil Okafor,
Duke 2016 Ben Simmons,
LSU 2017 Lonzo Ball,
UCLA 2018 Trae Young,
Oklahoma 2019 Zion Williamson,
Duke 2020 Vernon Carey Jr.,
Duke 2021 Cade Cunningham,
Oklahoma State 2022
Jabari Smith, Auburn |
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