NCAA DI Bracket 2010 NIT Bracket 2010 CBI Bracket 2010
Duke
Captures Fourth National Championship With 61-59 Win Over Butler
- Apr 6, 2010
The too-perfect basketball story with the too-perfect ending is still available on DVD. The real celebration for the new national champion that's taking place on Tobacco Road. Kyle Singler (6'8''-F-88) scored 19 points and Brian Zoubek (7'1''-C-88) rebounded Gordon Hayward (6'9''-G/F-90)'s miss with 3.6 seconds left Monday night to help Duke beat Butler 61-59, ending the tiny underdog's try for a 'Hoosiers' sequel one win short of the Hollywood ending. The Bulldogs had a chance to win it at the end in an amazing sequence that defined this tournament. Gordon Hayward's half-court shot at the buzzer went flying, thudded off the backboard and rim, and out and most of the crowd of 70,930 gasped, 'Ohhhh.' So close The Blue Devils (35-5) snapped Butler's 25-game winning streak and brought the long-awaited fourth national title back home to Carolina and the Cameron Crazies. The 'Big Three' Singler, Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) and Nolan Smith (6'2''-G-88) won the Big One for coach Mike Krzyzewski , his first championship since 2001 and the fourth overall, tying Coach K with Adolph Rupp for second place on the all-time list. 'First of all, it was a great basketball game. I want to congratulate an amazing Butler team and their fans,' Krzyzewski said. 'Fabulous year. We played a great game, they played a great game. It's hard for me to say it, to imagine that we're the national champions.' Nobody figured this would be easy, and it wasn't no way that was going to happen against Butler, the 4,200-student private school that turned the tournament upside down and drove 5.6 miles from its historic home, Hinkle Fieldhouse, to the Final Four. Butler (33-5) shaved a five-point deficit to one and had a chance to win it, when its best player, Hayward, took the ball at the top of the key, spun and worked his way to the baseline, but was forced to put up an off-balance fadeaway from 15 feet. He missed, Zoubek got the rebound and made the first of two free throws. He missed the second one intentionally, and Duke's title wasn't secure until Hayward's desperation heave bounded out. What a game to end one of the most memorable tournaments in history, the kind that could be history if the NCAA goes ahead with what an expansion to 96 teams something very much on the table for next year. 'Both teams and all the kids on both teams played their hearts out,' Krzyzewski said. 'There was never more than a couple, a few points separating, so a lot of kids made big plays for both teams.' Nobody led by more than six. Playing against the Bulldogs and working against a crowd of 70,390 with very few pockets of Duke fans, the Blue Devils persevered never leading by more than six but never falling behind after Singler hit a 3-pointer with 13:03 left for a 47-43 lead. The Blue Devils won with defense. Holding the Bulldogs to 34 percent shooting and contesting every possession as tenaciously as Butler, which allowed 60 points for the first time since February. Zoubek, the 7-foot-1 center, finished with two blocks, 10 rebounds and too many altered shots to count, but also came out to trap the Butler guards and disrupt an offense that was already struggling. They won with some clutch shooting, including Singler's 3-for-6 effort from 3-point range and 6 of 6 from the free throw line in the second half until Zoubek's intentional miss. They won with a mean streak, most pointed when Lance Thomas (6'8''-F-88) took down Hayward hard to prevent an easy layup with 5:07 left. The refs reviewed the play and decided not to call it flagrant one of a hundred little moments that could have swung such a tight, taut game. In the true team fashion that has defined 'The Butler Way,' the scoring was distributed almost perfectly even. Hayward and Shelvin Mack had 12 each. Matt Howard, coming off a concussion in the semifinal win over Michigan State, finished with 11, and 2-point-a-game scorer Avery Jukes (6'8''-F) kept Butler in it with all 10 of his points in the first half. But Butler's 33-year-old coach Brad Stevens was correct when he said his team couldn't endure another 15-for-49 shooting night what Butler shot Saturday in the semifinals. The Bulldogs went 20 for 58 this time 34.5 percent almost every bit as bad. All the heart in the world can't overcome that. 'I said yesterday that when you coach these guys, you can be at peace with whatever result you achieve from a won-loss standpoint because of what they gave they gave everything we had,' Stevens said. 'We just came up a bounce short. There's certainly nothing to hang your head about. I told them in there, what they've done, what they did together, will last longer than one night, regardless of the outcome.' A disappointing ending to those who wanted to see the 'Hoosiers' sequel play out in real life. In that movie, based on the high school championship won by tiny Milan High in 1954, Jimmy Chitwood hits the game-winner at the buzzer to win one for the little guys. Despite losing, Butler may have proven its point nonetheless. Mega-money and power conferences aren't the only ones with a chance in big-time college sports. Nothing proves that better than the NCAA tournament March Madness, a great event that stayed good into April this year. Courtesy of Duke University and AP NCAA All-Tournament Team Kyle Singler of Duke Nolan Smith of Duke Jon Scheyer of Duke Shelvin Mack of Butler Gordon Hayward of Butler Dayton wins NIT, beats North Carolina 79-68 - Apr 2, 2010 Dayton players danced at midcourt and then lingered on ladders as they cut down the nets at Madison Square Garden. Forgive these Flyers for taking a little extra time to soak it all in. They're not as accustomed to trophy ceremonies as the North Carolina team they had just beaten. Marcus Johnson (6'3''-G-87) scored 20 points and Dayton denied last year's national champs another title, topping the Tar Heels 79-68 Thursday night to win the NIT. 'This game kind of is a capsule of our season,' coach Brian Gregory said. 'Started off great, had some tough times and then just kind of fight through, and ended up very successful at the end.' Relying on depth, defense and some clutch 3-point shooting, the Flyers took home their first title in 42 years and handed North Carolina one more disheartening loss at the end of a lousy season. 'It's a tough feeling right now, there's no question about that. It's been an unusual year for North Carolina basketball,' coach Roy Williams said, his eyes red and puffy as he spoke about his seniors. 'I've lived a charmed life in the past, and this has been a little tougher. I'm so proud of our guys for coming to play in this National Invitation Tournament and playing so well up until today and getting us to this point. We just didn't finish the job.' Reserve guard Paul Williams (6'4''-G-89) added 16 points for No. 3 seed Dayton (25-12), which bounced back from a disappointing regular season of its own to win its third NIT title and first since 1968 under coach Don Donoher. Picked to win the Atlantic 10 Conference, the athletic and experienced Flyers faded late and missed the NCAA tournament before turning things around and finishing on a high note. 'We struggled through the season. But being in the NIT, we stayed positive and we showed we have heart and character,' said Chris Johnson (6'5''-G/F-90), selected the tournament's most outstanding player. 'It shows today that we are a good team. We just won a championship.' Will Graves shot North Carolina back into the game in the second half, finishing with seven 3-pointers and 25 points for the fourth-seeded Tar Heels (20-17), who started the season hoping for back-to-back NCAA crowns. Chris Wright (6'8''-F-88) had 14 points for the Flyers, as did Chris Johnson who scored 22 in a semifinal victory over Mississippi. Including the Rebels and Tar Heels, Dayton beat four teams from BCS conferences en route to the championship. Cincinnati and Illinois were the others. 'Love their intensity and enthusiasm and how hard they have played,' Roy Williams said. 'We have had teams like that in the past that have played really, really hard, and very talented. Also, I think we started playing hard once we got in this NIT.' The Tar Heels fell short in their attempt to grab a somewhat dubious piece of college basketball history. A victory Thursday night would have made them the first team to follow up an NCAA national championship with a NIT crown the next year. With officials discussing expanding the NCAA tournament to 96 teams as soon as next year, this could be the last NIT, an event with a rich history that dates to 1938. NCAA vice president Greg Shaheen said Thursday no decision has been made about the future of the postseason NIT, which is operated independently by the NCAA. 'Might be a fitting way to end it, for us to win it,' Gregory said. How down-and-out were these Tar Heels heading into the postseason? When the 32-team NIT draw was announced, they opened at 35-1 odds to win the title. And while Dayton has been a regular in this event, it was strange to see North Carolina on the college basketball undercard this time of year. One of the sport's true heavyweights, the Tar Heels own five NCAA national championships, including an 89-72 victory over Michigan State in last year's title game. Tom Izzo and the Spartans are back in the Final Four, set to play Butler in Indianapolis on Saturday. North Carolina was left to chase a consolation prize following a 16-16 regular season wrecked by injuries, leaky defense and a string of embarrassing losses. The blue bloods from Tobacco Road still have one NIT title, which came in 1971. Every time North Carolina got close in the second half, Dayton had a response. Tar Heels guard Marcus Ginyard missed a contested layup that could have tied it at 59, and Paul Williams hit one of his four 3s on the other end with 7:46 left. A 3-pointer by Graves cut UNC's deficit to 67-63 with 3:37 remaining, but Chris Johnson countered with a 3 of his own and a follow-up dunk to put Dayton up by nine with 2:50 to go. North Carolina, which committed 15 turnovers, never got closer than five the rest of the way. 'Our guys played with great toughness and desire,' Gregory said. 'We answered everything they threw at us.' This was Dayton's 22nd appearance in the NIT, second only to St. John's (27). The Flyers also won it in 1962. Courtesy of Yahoo USBasket.com All-NCAA D1 Awards 2009-10 - Apr 5, 2010
Player of the Year: John Wall (6'4''-G-90) of Kentucky 1st Team Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State John Wall of Kentucky 2nd Team Demarcus Cousins (6'11''-F-90) of Kentucky Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of Kansas Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke Greivis Vasquez (6'6''-G-87) of Maryland Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Coleman leads team to 106-101 All-Star victory
- Apr 4, 2010Former Purdue coach Gene Keady finally won a game at the Final Four. The record-setting Boilermakers coach made a one-game return to the sideline Friday in a college All-Star game and finally got his elusive win during college basketball's biggest weekend. 'It felt good,' Keady said gruffly after the 106-101 victory. 'It felt good to have my old team back.' It was the kind of homecoming Keady had dreamed about since retiring in 2005. He was joined on the bench in Indianapolis by Illinois coach Bruce Weber , his former assistant, and Matt Painter , his former player. Painter succeeded Keady as Purdue's coach and agreed to an eight-year contract extension Friday. And it seemed like old times for the whole group. 'Ideally, you want to come back to the Final Four as a team,' Weber said. 'But when you don't, you get a chance to see former coaches and players, and that's the fun part of it.' Clearly, the National Association of Basketball Coaches intended to give this game a home-state flavor. Besides Keady, Weber and Painter, the Reese's team also included one of Painter's players, guard Chris Kramer (6'3''-G-88). Bill Hodges, who led Indiana State to the Final Four in 1979 with Larry Bird , coached the Hershey's team which included two former Indianapolis prep stars - Deonta Vaughn (6'1''-G-86) of Cincinnati and Robert Glenn (6'7''-F) of IUPUI. Aside from Keady's return, the game was dominated by non-Hoosiers. Aubrey Coleman of Houston scored 15 points and twice led big rallies to get Keady's team within striking distance. Five other players, including Cal's Jerome Randle (5'10''-G-87), reached double figures for Reese's. Randle finished with 12 points and was named the team's Most Outstanding Player. Eric Boateng (6'10''-C-85, college: Duke) of Arizona State finally gave Keady's team the lead for good with a dunk with 4:48 left, and Artsiom Parakhouski (6'11''-C-87) of Radford sealed the win with two straight baskets in the closing minutes. Both post players finished with eight points. Coleman didn't think he did enough. 'I wanted to play more,' he said, a comment that certainly would have drawn Keady's ire during his heyday. 'I still put up, I think, 14, but if I would have been on the court more - I'm a competitor. I can't sit when it's crucial times, I want to be on the floor. I don't want to be watching.' Hodges' team was led by Marquette's Lazar Hayward (6'6''-F-86), who finished with 23 points and seven rebounds. He was named the team's Most Outstanding Player. Four other players reached double figures for Hershey's, including Rodney Green (6'5''-G-88) with 18 and Jermaine Beal (6'3''-G-87) with 17. For a while, it looked like Keady wouldn't win this one, either. His team fell into a 47-34 hole with 5:20 left in the first half before Coleman and UCLA's Michael Roll (6'5''-G-87) ignited a 10-0 run that got the team back within 51-50 with 3:18 to go. Hodges' team rebuilt a 72-63 lead early in the second half, but Coleman made both of his 3-pointers during a 12-5 run that cut the lead to 82-79. Boateng's dunk with 4:48 left finally put Keady's team in the lead for the first time in 33 minutes, and Parakhouski sealed it with his late baskets. 'It was rewarding, it was enjoyable, it was fun,' he said. 'We're still a team, and it's always been about the team at Purdue, not one person.' Courtesy of AP NABC Division I All-America Teams 2009-10 - Apr 6, 2010
1st Team Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of Kansas Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State John Wall (6'4''-G-90) of Kentucky 2nd Team Cole Aldrich (6'11''-C-88) of Kansas DeMarcus Cousins (6'11''-F-90) of Kentucky Robbie Hummel (6'8''-F-89) of Purdue Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke Greivis Vasquez (6'6''-G-87) of Maryland 3rd Team James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State Da'Sean Butler (6'7''-F-88) of West Virginia Jimmer Fredette (6'2''-G) of BYU Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Greg Monroe (6'11''-C-90) of Georgetown AP NCAA All-America Teams 2009-10 - Mar 30, 2010
1st Team Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State John Wall (6'4''-G-90) of Kentucky Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova Demarcus Cousins (6'11''-F-90) of Kentucky 2nd Team James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of Kansas Greivis Vasquez (6'6''-G-87) of Maryland Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke Da'Sean Butler (6'7''-F-88) of West Virginia 3rd Team Greg Monroe (6'11''-C-90) of Georgetown Cole Aldrich (6'11''-C-88) of Kansas Damion James (6'7''-G/F-87) of Texas Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Darington Hobson (6'7''-G/F-87) of New Mexico Honorable Mention Al-Farouq Aminu (6'9''-F-90) of Wake Forest Kevin Anderson (6'0''-G-88) of Richmond Luke Babbitt (6'9''-F-89) of Nevada Keith Benson (6'11''-C-88) of Oakland Matt Bouldin (6'5''-G-88) of Gonzaga Randy Culpepper (6'0''-G-89) of UTEP Noah Dahlman (6'6''-F-89) of Wofford Malcolm Delaney (6'3''-G-89) of Virginia Tech Devan Downey (5'9''-G-87) of South Carolina Muhammad El-Amin (6'5''-G) of Stony Brook Kenneth Faried (6'8''-F/C-89) of Morehead State Alex Franklin (6'5''-F-88) of Siena Jimmer Fredette (6'2''-G) of BYU Marquez Haynes (6'3''-G-86) of Texas-Arlington Gordon Hayward (6'9''-G/F-90) of Butler Lazar Hayward (6'6''-F-86) of Marquette Adnan Hodzic (6'9''-C-88) of Lipscomb Reggie Holmes (6'4''-G) of Morgan State Robbie Hummel (6'8''-F-89) of Purdue Charles Jenkins (6'3''-G-89) of Hofstra Garrison Johnson (6'5''-G-88) of Jackson State Orlando Johnson (6'5''-G-89) of UC Santa Barbara Tyren Johnson (6'8''-F-88) of Louisiana-Lafayette Dominique Jones (6'4''-G-88) of South Florida Adam Koch (6'8''-F-88) of Northern Iowa David Kool (6'3''-G-87) of Western Michigan Damian Lillard (6'2''-G-90) of Weber State Kalin Lucas (6'0''-G-89) of Michigan State C.J. McCollum (6'3''-G) of Lehigh E'Twaun Moore (6'4''-G-89) of Purdue Artsiom Parakhouski (6'11''-C-87) of Radford Patrick Patterson (6'9''-F-89) of Kentucky Quincy Pondexter (6'6''-F-88) of Washington Jacob Pullen (6'0''-G-89) of Kansas State Jerome Randle (5'10''-G-87) of California Andy Rautins (6'4''-G-86) of Syracuse Justin Rutty (6'7''-F) of Quinnipiac Omar Samhan (6'11''-C-88) of Saint Mary's Kyle Singler (6'8''-F-88) of Duke Ekpe Udoh (6'10''-F/C-87) of Baylor Jarvis Varnado (6'9''-F-88) of Mississippi State Hassan Whiteside (7'0''-F-89) of Marshall Ryan Wittman (6'6''-F) of Cornell USBWA All-America team 2009-10 - Mar 29, 2010
USBWA All-America 1st Team Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of University of Kansas of Kansas Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse University of Syracuse Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova University of Villanova Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State University of Ohio State John Wall (6'4''-G-90) of University of Kentucky of Kentucky USBWA All-America 2nd Team Cole Aldrich (6'11''-C-88) of Kansas James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State Demarcus Cousins (6'11''-F-90) of Kentucky Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke USBWA All-America Freshman of the Year John Wall of Kentucky Sporting News NCAA All-America Teams 2009-10 - Mar 12, 2010
First Team James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State John Wall (6'4''-G) of University of Kentucky Greivis Vasquez (6'6''-G-87) of Maryland Second Team Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of Kansas Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke Damion James (6'7''-G/F-87) of Texas Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse Demarcus Cousins (6'11''-F) of Kentucky Third Team Jacob Pullen (6'0''-G-89) of Kansas State Jordan Crawford (6'4''-G-88) of Xavier Jimmer Fredette (6'2''-G) of BYU Darington Hobson (6'7''-G/F-87) of New Mexico Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Fourth Team Tweety Carter (5'11''-G-86) of Baylor Jerome Randle (5'10''-G-87) of California Devan Downey (5'9''-G-87) of South Carolina Malcolm Delaney (6'3''-G-89) of Virginia Tech Matt Bouldin (6'5''-G-88) of Gonzaga Fifth Team Andy Rautins (6'4''-G-86) of Syracuse Trevon Hughes (6'0''-G-87) of Wisconsin Lazar Hayward (6'6''-F-86) of Marquette Kyle Singler (6'8''-F-88) of Duke Austin Freeman (6'4''-G-89) of Georgetown USBWA All-District Awards 2009-10 - Mar 10, 2010 District I Player of the Year: Jamine Peterson (6'6''-F-88) of Providence Coach of the Year: Bill Coen of Northeastern All-District Team Marqus Blakely (6'5''-F) of Vermont Keith Cothran (6'4''-G-86) of Rhode Island Jerome Dyson (6'3''-G-87) of Connecticut John Holland (6'5''-F/G-88) of Boston U. Matt Janning (6'4''-G/F-88) of Northeastern Jeremy Lin (6'3''-G) of Harvard Jamine Peterson of Providence Stanley Robinson (6'9''-F-88) of Connecticut Joe Trapani (6'8''-F-88) of Boston College Kemba Walker (6'1''-G-90) of Connecticut District II Player of the Year: Scottie Reynolds (6'2''-G-87) of Villanova Coach of the Year: Jim Boeheim of Syracuse All-District Team Lavoy Allen (6'9''-F) of Temple Dasean Butler (6'7''-F-88) of West Virginia Austin Freeman (6'4''-G-89) of Georgetown Ashton Gibbs (6'2''-G-90) of Pittsburgh Jeremy Hazell (6'5''-G-86) of Seton Hall Wesley Johnson (6'7''-F-87) of Syracuse Greg Monroe (6'11''-C-90) of Georgetown Andy Rautins (6'4''-G-86) of Syracuse Scottie Reynolds of Villanova Ryan Wittman (6'6''-F) of Cornell District III Player of the Year: Greivis Vasquez (6'6''-G-87) of Maryland Coach of the Year: Gary Williams of Maryland District Team Al-Farouq Aminu (6'9''-F-90) of Wake Forest Trevor Booker (6'7''-F-87) of Clemson Malcolm Delaney (6'3''-G-89) of Virginia Tech Devan Downey (5'9''-G-87) of South Carolina Sylven Landesberg (6'6''-G-90) of Virginia Artsiom Parakhouski (6'11''-C-87) of Radford Jon Scheyer (6'5''-G-87) of Duke Kyle Singler (6'8''-F-88) of Duke Nolan Smith (6'2''-G-88) of Duke Greivis Vasquez of Maryland District IV Player of the Year: John Wall (6'4''-G) of Kentucky Coach of the Year: John Calipari of Kentucky All-District Team Jermaine Beal (6'3''-G-87) of Vanderbilt Wayne Chism (6'9''-F-87) of Tennessee Demarcus Cousins (6'11''-F) of Kentucky Dominique Jones (6'4''-G-88) of South Florida Patrick Patterson (6'9''-F-89) of Kentucky Trey Thompkins (6'10''-F-90) of Georgia Jarvis Varnado (6'9''-F-88) of Mississippi State John Wall of Kentucky Chris Warren (5'10''-G-88) of Ole Miss Elliot Williams (6'5''-G-89) of Memphis District V Player of the Year: Evan Turner (6'7''-G/F-88) of Ohio State Coach of the Year: Matt Painter of Purdue All-District Team Jordan Crawford (6'4''-G-88) of Xavier Luke Harangody (6'8''-F-88) of Notre Dame Gordon Hayward (6'9''-G/F-90) of Butler Trevon Hughes (6'0''-G-87) of Wisconsin Robbie Hummel (6'8''-F-89) of Purdue Jajuan Johnson (6'10''-F/C-89) of Purdue Kalin Lucas (6'0''-G-89) of Michigan State Demetri McCamey (6'3''-G-89) of Illinois E'Twaun Moore (6'4''-G-89) of Purdue Evan Turner of Ohio State District VI Player of the Year: James Anderson (6'6''-G-89) of Oklahoma State Coach of the Year: Frank Martin of Kansas State All-District Team Cole Aldrich (6'11''-C-88) of Kansas James Anderson of Oklahoma State Craig Brackins (6'10''-F-87) of Iowa State Denis Clemente (6'1''-G-86) of Kansas State Sherron Collins (5'11''-G-87) of Kansas Jordan Eglseder (7'0''-C-88) of Northern Iowa Kim English (6'6''-G) of Missouri Xavier Henry (6'6''-G) of Kansas Adam Koch (6'8''-F-88) of Northern Iowa Jacob Pullen (6'0''-G-89) of Kansas State District VII Player of the Year: Damion James (6'7''-G/F-87) of Texas Coach of the Year: John Brady of Arkansas State All-District Team Rotnei Clarke (6'0''-G-89) of Arkansas Gilberto Clavell (6'6''-F-89) of Sam Houston State Randy Culpepper (6'0''-G-89) of UTEP Damion James of Texas Tyren Johnson (6'8''-F-88) of Louisiana Lafayette Tasmin Mitchell (6'7''-F-86) of LSU Brandon Reed (6'3''-G) of Arkansas State Mike Singletary (6'6''-F-88) of Texas Tech Donald Sloan of Texas A&M Ekpe Udoh of Baylor District VIII Player of the Year: Jimmer Fredette (6'2''-G) of BYU Coach of the Year: Steve Alford of New Mexico All-District Team Luke Babbitt (6'9''-F-89) of Nevada Jackson Emery (6'3''-G-87) of BYU Jimmer Fredette of BYU Cory Higgins (6'5''-G-89) of Colorado Darington Hobson (6'7''-G/F-87) of New Mexico Damian Lillard (6'2''-G-90) of Weber State Roman Martinez (6'6''-F-88) of New Mexico Jared Quayle (6'1''-G-85) of Utah State Tre'Von Willis (6'4''-G-88) of UNLV Jahmar Young (6'5''-G) of New Mexico State District IX Player of the Year: Jerome Randle (5'10''-G-87) of California Coach of the Year: Herb Sendek of Arizona State All-District Team Matt Bouldin (6'5''-G-88) of Gonzaga Patrick Christopher (6'5''-G-88) of California Landry Fields (6'7''-G/F) of Stanford Elias Harris (6'8''-F-89) of Gonzaga Kawhi Leonard (6'6''-F-91) of San Diego State Adrian Oliver (6'4''-G-88) of San Jose State Quincy Pondexter (6'6''-F-88) of Washington Jerome Randle of California Omar Samhan (6'11''-C-88) of Saint Mary's Klay Thompson (6'6''-G-90) of Washington State | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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