Big 12 Conference: Season 2015-16

B12 Standings
 1. Kansas (2) 16-3 (28-4) 
 2. W.Virginia (10) 13-6 (24-8) 
 3. Oklahoma (3) 12-6 (24-6) 
 4. Texas (24) 11-7 (20-11) 
 5. Baylor (25) 10-8 (21-10) 
 6. Iowa St. (13) 10-8 (21-10) 
 7. Texas Tech 9-9 (19-11) 
 8. Kansas St. 5-13 (16-15) 
 9. Oklahoma St. 3-15 (12-19) 
 10. TCU 2-16 (11-20) 

Points Per Game
 Buddy HIELD
  Oklahoma
  (193-G-93)
  Avg: 24.8
 1. Hield, Oklahoma24.8 
 2. Niang, Iowa St.19.9 
 3. Ellis, Kansas16.8 
 4. Prince, Baylor15.6 
 5. Taylor, Texas14.9 
 6. Morris, Iowa St.14.1 
 7. Paige, W.Virginia13.9 
 8. Selden, Kansas13.5 
 9. Williams, W.Virgin.13.3 
 10. Cousins, Oklahoma12.9 
Rebounds Per Game
 Ryan SPANGLER
  Oklahoma
  (203-F-91)
  Avg: 9.5
 1. Spangler, Oklahoma9.5 
 2. Williams, W.Virgin.9.3 
 3. Gathers, Baylor9.2 
 4. Ridley, Texas9.2 
 5. McKay, Iowa St.9.1 
 6. Holton, W.Virginia7.7 
 7. Smith, Texas Tech7.4 
 8. Prince, Baylor6.2 
 9. Ellis, Kansas6.1 
 10. Niang, Iowa St.6.1 
Assists Per Game
 Monte MORRIS
  Iowa St.
  (190-PG-95)
  Avg: 6.8
 1. Morris, Iowa St.6.8 
 2. Medford, Baylor6.5 
 3. Evans, Oklahoma.4.9 
 4. Taylor, Texas4.9 
 5. Mason, Kansas4.7 
 6. Cousins, Oklahoma4.5 
 7. Griffin, Oklahoma3.9 
 8. Graham, Kansas3.7 
 9. Iwundu, Kansas St.3.7 
 10. Woodard, Oklahoma3.4 
Steals Per Game
 Malique TRENT
  TCU
  (188-G-)
  Avg: 2.1
 1. Trent, TCU2.1 
 2. Edwards, Kansas S.1.8 
 3. Morris, Iowa St.1.8 
 4. Medford, Baylor1.7 
 5. Carter, W.Virginia1.7 
 6. Phillip, W.Virginia1.6 
 7. Woodard, Oklahoma1.6 
 8. Miles, W.Virginia1.5 
 9. Paige, W.Virginia1.5 
 10. Newberry, Oklahom.1.5 
Blocks Per Game
 Cameron RIDLEY
  Texas
  (206-C/F-93)
  Avg: 3
 1. Ridley, Texas3.0 
 2. Lattin, Oklahoma2.2 
 3. Ibeh, Texas2.0 
 4. McKay, Iowa St.1.8 
 5. Smith, Texas Tech1.5 
 6. Manyang, Oklahoma1.2 
 7. Motley, Baylor1.2 
 8. Allen, Oklahoma St.1.1 
 9. Olivier, Oklahoma1.0 
 10. Brodziansky, TCU1.0 

B12 Women 2015-2016
Official Web Site


University of Kansas wins the B12 2015-2016 title (Photo: B12)

University of Kansas 2015-16
Bill Self Bill Self Self
Wayne Selden
Selden
Frank Mason
Mason
Landen Lucas
Lucas
Perry Ellis
Ellis
Devonte Graham
Graham
# Name CM (INCH) Pos Bo NAT
1  Selden Wayne 196 (6'5'') SF 94 USA
0  Mason Frank 180 (5'11'') PG USA
33  Lucas Landen 208 (6'10'') F USA
34  Ellis Perry 203 (6'8'') F 93 USA
4  Graham Devonte 186 (6'1'') G USA
13  Diallo Cheick 206 (6'9'') C/F 96 Mali
42  Mickelson Hunter 208 (6'10'') F 92 USA
31  Traylor Jamari 203 (6'8'') F USA
14  Greene Brannen 201 (6'7'') G USA
10  Mykhailiuk Sviatoslav 203 (6'8'') SG 97 Ukraine
21  Young Clay 193 (6'4'') F/G USA
15  Bragg Carlton 206 (6'9'') F 95 USA
11  Self Tyler 188 (6'2'') G USA
2  Vick Lagerald 196 (6'5'') SG USA
5  Manning Evan 191 (6'3'') G USA
Head Coach: Bill Self
Coach Assistant: Norman Roberts
Coach Assistant: Kurtis Townsend
Coach Assistant: Jerrance Howard


Kansas Wins Phillips 66 Men's Basketball Championship - Mar 13, 2016

Bill Self still remembers the day Devonte Graham (6'1''-G) stepped foot on the Kansas campus, back when the point guard was trying to decide where he was going to play college basketball.
"I told him when he visited, 'You're going to won this place if you just come in and try hard,'" Self recalled with a smile. "His attitude is just a 10 and I think it's rubbed off on others."
His game has turned into a 10, too.
Graham matched a career-high with 27 points Saturday night, Wayne Selden (6'5''-SF-94) added 21, and the top-ranked Jayhawks overcame a remarkable performance by West Virginia's Devin Williams (6'9''-F) for an 81-71 victory over the No. 9 Mountaineers in the Big 12 Tournament title game.
Perry Ellis added 17 points for the Jayhawks (30-4), who almost certainly locked up the No. 1 overall seed for the NCAA Tournament by winning their 10th Big 12 Tournament championship.
"I felt like we played well," said Graham, the game net hanging around his neck. "We just have to keep playing the way we've been playing. Play better. Keep the confidence we have. Keep this momentum going."
Kansas trailed the Mountaineers (26-8) at the break before seizing control, and it was Graham who made the difference. He hit five 3-pointers, was 10 of 10 from the foul line and had a four steals while helping his teammates through the Mountaineers' trademark pressure.
"I can't put it into words," Graham said. "It's a good feeling."
Williams finished with a career-best 31 points and 10 rebounds, but the junior forward was forced to carry the load by himself. Jevon Carter (6'2''-PG) was held to four points after scoring 26 in a semifinal win over No. 6 Oklahoma, and leading scorer Jaysean Paige (6'2''-G) managed just six points while committing four turnovers.
"We came here to win a championship and we fell short," Paige still. "Time to go back to work."
With supporters and protesters of Republican presidential contender Donald Trump trading barbs just down the street, two teams intimately familiar with each other spent the first 20 minutes trading baskets.
Trading turnovers, too. They combined for 24 of those in the first half.
Williams was the difference-maker, scoring 18 points on 7-for-7 shooting. That helped the Mountaineers cover a 0-for-7 performance from beyond the arc and forge a 33-32 halftime advantage.
It didn't stay that way for long.
With his infectious aura and devil-may-care attitude, Graham began to take over for the Jayhawks in the second half. He knocked down a 3-pointer immediately out of the locker room, then curled in two more in quick succession to give Kansas a 51-39 lead with just under 15 minutes to go.
West Virginia's vaunted press, so effective early in the game, had been reduced to shreds.
Attrition and foul trouble also began to play a role. Williams appeared gassed in the closing minutes, and Carter and Daxter Miles (6'3''-G) had to play with four fouls apiece down the stretch.
The remarkable depth of the Jayhawks became apparent as Self kept sending wave after wave of long, talented players onto the floor. And no matter what combination he used, Kansas never seemed to get too far out of rhythm, holding the Mountaineers at bay in the closing minutes.
When the final buzzer sounded, the Jayhawks celebrated in a businesslike manner - as if they had known all along the outcome was inevitable. They shook hands with West Virginia, gathered together in front of the bench and patiently awaited their coronation as the league's best one more time.
"It probably was not the most artistic game, but both teams competed hard," Self said. "They had a guy that played unreal and we had a couple of guys that did as well, but it was a good game, and a game that was tough, and I'm certainly very proud of our team."

Courtesy of Big12Sports

Big 12 Tournament Final: Kansas - West Virginia 81-71
Big 12 Tournament Semifinals:
Kansas - Baylor 70-66
West Virginia - Oklahoma 69-67


All-Big 12 Awards 2016 - Mar 13, 2016

All-Big 12 1st Team 2016
Taurean Prince
Prince
Georges Niang
Niang
Perry Ellis
Ellis
Buddy Hield
Hield
Isaiah Taylor
Taylor

All-Tournament MVP: Devonte Graham (6'1''-G) of Kansas
Player of the Year: Buddy Hield (6'4''-G-93) of Oklahoma
Defensive Player of the Year: Prince Ibeh (6'10''-C-94) of Texas
Freshman of the Year: Jawun Evans (6'0''-PG) of Oklahoma St.
Newcomer of the Year: Deonte Burton (6'4''-G/F-94) of Iowa St.
Sixth Man of the Year: Jaysean Paige (6'2''-G) of W.Virginia
Coach of the Year: Tubby Smith of Texas Tech

1st Team
F: Taurean Prince (6'7''-F-94) of Baylor
F: Georges Niang (6'8''-F-93) of Iowa St.
F: Perry Ellis (6'8''-F-93) of Kansas
G: Buddy Hield (6'4''-G-93) of Oklahoma
PG: Isaiah Taylor (6'1''-PG-94) of Texas

2nd Team
PG: Monte Morris (6'3''-PG-95) of Iowa St.
PG: Frank Mason (5'11''-PG) of Kansas
SF: Wayne Selden (6'5''-SF-94) of Kansas
G: Jaysean Paige (6'2''-G) of W.Virginia
F: Devin Williams (6'9''-F) of W.Virginia

3rd Team
F: Rico Gathers (6'8''-F-94) of Baylor
F: Johnathan Motley (6'9''-F-95) of Baylor
F: Wesley Iwundu (6'7''-F-94) of Kansas St.
G: Isaiah Cousins (6'4''-G) of Oklahoma
F: Ryan Spangler (6'8''-F-91) of Oklahoma

Honorable Mention
Lester Medford (5'10''-PG-93) of Baylor
Jameel McKay (6'9''-F-92) of Iowa St.
Abdel Nader (6'6''-F-93) of Iowa St.
Matt Thomas (6'4''-G-94) of Iowa St.
Devonte Graham (6'1''-G) of Kansas
Landen Lucas (6'10''-F) of Kansas
Jordan Woodard (6'0''-PG) of Oklahoma
Jawun Evans (6'0''-PG) of Oklahoma St.
Jeff Newberry (6'2''-G-92) of Oklahoma St.
Javan Felix (5'11''-PG-94) of Texas
Toddrick Gotcher (6'4''-G-93) of Texas Tech
Aaron Ross (6'8''-F-92) of Texas Tech
Zach Smith (6'8''-F-96) of Texas Tech

All-Defensive Team
G: Devonte Graham (6'1''-G) of Kansas
PG: Frank Mason (5'11''-PG) of Kansas
F: Wesley Iwundu (6'7''-F-94) of Kansas St.
F: Khadeem Lattin (6'9''-F) of Oklahoma
C: Prince Ibeh (6'10''-C-94) of Texas
PG: Jevon Carter (6'2''-PG) of W.Virginia

All-Tournament Team
G: Devonte Graham (6'1''-G) of Kansas
F: Perry Ellis (6'8''-F-93) of Kansas
F: Devin Williams (6'9''-F) of W.Virginia
G: Buddy Hield (6'4''-G-93) of Oklahoma
F: Georges Niang (6'8''-F-93) of Iowa St.

All-Newcomer Team
G/F: Deonte Burton (6'4''-G/F-94) of Iowa St.
G: Barry Brown (6'3''-G-96) of Kansas St.
F: Dean Wade (6'8''-F-96) of Kansas St.
PG: Jawun Evans (6'0''-PG) of Oklahoma St.
G: Eric Davis (6'3''-G-97) of Texas
G: Kerwin Roach (6'1''-G) of Texas