2010–11 Big East Conference men's basketball season

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2010–11 Big East Conference men's basketball season
Big East new.png
League NCAA Division I
Sport Basketball
Duration December 27, 2010
through March 5, 2011
Number of teams 16
Total attendance 3,003,173 [1]
Average attendance 11,082 [1]
TV partner(s) Big East Network, ESPN
Regular Season
Champion Pittsburgh (15–3)
Runners-up Notre Dame (14–4)
Season MVP Ben Hansbrough (ND)
Tournament
Champions Connecticut
  Runners-up Louisville
Finals MVP Kemba Walker (CONN)
Big East Conference men's basketball seasons
2010–11 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
#4 Pittsburgh 15 3   .833     28 6   .824
#5 Notre Dame 14 4   .778     27 7   .794
#12 Syracuse 12 6   .667     27 8   .771
#14 Louisville 12 6   .667     25 10   .714
#18 St. John's 12 6   .667     21 12   .636
Cincinnati 11 7   .611     26 9   .743
#22 West Virginia 11 7   .611     21 12   .636
Georgetown 10 8   .556     21 11   .656
#10 Connecticut 9 9   .500     32 9   .780
Villanova 9 9   .500     21 12   .636
Marquette 9 9   .500     22 15   .595
Seton Hall 7 11   .389     13 18   .419
Rutgers 5 13   .278     15 17   .469
Providence 4 14   .222     15 17   .469
South Florida 3 15   .167     10 23   .303
DePaul 1 17   .056     7 24   .226
2011 Big East Tournament winner
As of April 4, 2011[2]; Rankings from AP Poll

The 2010–11 Big East Conference men's basketball season was the 32nd season of competitive basketball played by the Big East Conference, since its inception in 1979, and involved its 16 full-time member schools. The season officially opened on December 27, 2010, when Pittsburgh defeated Connecticut, 78–63, and ended on March 5, 2011, with a 72–56 victory for St. John's over South Florida.

Pittsburgh captured the regular season title for the fourth time, and third outright, with a conference win-loss record of 15–3.[3] The Panthers also received the no. 1 seed in the Big East Tournament, and a bye into the quarterfinals, along with 2nd-seed Notre Dame, 3rd-seed Louisville, and 4th-seed Syracuse. St. John's, West Virginia, Cincinnati, and Georgetown rounded out the top eight, and all received a bye into the tournament's second round. Play began at noon on Tuesday, March 8 in Madison Square Garden, when 9th-seed Connecticut defeated 16th-seed DePaul, 97–71.[4] Play ended on Saturday, March 12, when Connecticut won their fifth game in five days, defeating Louisville, 69–66, for their seventh Big East Championship.[5]

At the finish of the regular season, prior to seeding for the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, it was widely speculated that the Big East would eclipse its NCAA record 8 bids, sending as many as 11 teams to the tournament.[6][7][8] The official tournament selection process took place on Sunday, March 13, and the predictions were accurate, as the following 11 Big East teams received bids into the tournament.[9] Connecticut won the national title, its third-ever national championship.[10]

Preseason

Coaching changes

Prior to the start of the 2010–11 season, four Big East programs hired new coaches, following the dismissal or resignation of their former coaches:

  • DePaul: Jerry Wainwright was fired in the middle of the 2009–10 season, after a 7–8 start, and a 22-game Big East losing streak. Wainwright, who compiled a 59–80 record, and a 20–51 conference record, in five seasons at the school, was replaced on an interim basis by assistant coach Tracy Webster, who remained with the team until a new head coach was hired.[11] On April 6, 2010, Clemson head coach Oliver Purnell was named the 13th head coach of the Blue Demons.[12]
  • Rutgers: After a lackluster performance by the Scarlet Knights during his four-year tenure, and a postseason incident at a PittsburghRutgers baseball game, in which he got into a shouting match with several of the Pittsburgh coaches, Fred Hill resigned his position as head coach on April 19, 2010.[13] It was reported that Hill had been asked to return for the 2010–11 season, however the shouting incident prompted Rutgers athletic director Tim Pernetti to ask for Hill's resignation, settling for an $850,000 contract buyout in exchange.[13] On May 6, 2010, Robert Morris head coach Mike Rice Jr. was announced as the 17th head coach of the Scarlet Knights.[14] Rice came to Rutgers after a successful three-year tenure at Robert Morris, achieving a 73–31 (.702) record, a 46–8 (.852) conference record, and two consecutive Northeast Conference tournament championships, leading to automatic bids into both the 2009 and 2010 NCAA Tournaments.
  • Seton Hall: Bobby Gonzalez was fired on March 17, 2010 after four tumultuous seasons with the Pirates, in which both his on and off court actions were heavily scrutinized.[15] The decision followed Seton Hall's 87–69 loss to Texas Tech in the first round of the 2010 National Invitation Tournament, in which then-sophomore forward Herb Pope was ejected from the game for punching Texas Tech player Darko Cohadarevic in the groin, and Gonzalez himself received his seventh technical foul of the season.[15][16] In a statement, Seton Hall University president Monsignor Robert Sheeran said he told Gonzalez that he had "lost [his] confidence in [Gonzalez's] ability to coach and lead this program," and had made the decision to fire Gonzalez on his own after consulting members of the campus community.[15] On March 29, 2010, former assistant to Rick Pitino at Louisville and Iona head coach Kevin Willard was named the 19th head coach of the Pirates.[17]
  • St. John's: Norm Roberts was fired as head coach on March 19, 2010, after losing its first round NIT game against Memphis, 73–71.[18] Roberts left the team after six seasons, compiling an 81–101 (.445) record, a 32–70 (.314) conference record, and only one winning season. He was replaced on March 31, 2010 by former UCLA head coach (1996–2003) and then-ESPN analyst Steve Lavin.[19]

Conference predictions

At Big East media day in October, the conference released their predictions for standings and All-Big East teams.[20][21]

Predicted Big East results

Big East Coaches[20] Big East Writers[22] Rivals.com[23]
1. Pittsburgh (12*) Pittsburgh (10) Pittsburgh
2. Villanova (1) Villanova (3) Villanova
3. Syracuse (2) Syracuse (2) Syracuse
4. Georgetown Georgetown West Virginia
5. West Virginia West Virginia (1) Georgetown
6. St. John's (1) Marquette Marquette
7. Notre Dame St. John's Seton Hall
8. Louisville (tie) Louisville St. John's
9. Marquette (tie) Notre Dame Connecticut
10. Connecticut Connecticut Notre Dame
11. Seton Hall Seton Hall Louisville
12. Cincinnati Cincinnati Cincinnati
13. South Florida South Florida South Florida
14. Providence Rutgers (tie) DePaul
15. Rutgers Providence (tie) Providence
16. DePaul DePaul Rutgers
* first place votes

Preseason All-Big East teams

First Team Second Team Honorable Mention
Austin Freeman, G., GTWN
Kemba Walker, G., CONN
Ashton Gibbs, G., PITT
Jeremy Hazell, G., HALL
Corey Fisher, G., VILL
Kevin Jones, F., WVU
Chris Wright, G., GTWN
Jimmy Butler, F., MARQ
Tim Abromaitis, F., ND
D. J. Kennedy, G., SJ
Kris Joseph, F., SYR
Yancy Gates, F., CIN
Darius Johnson-Odom, G., MARQ
Rick Jackson, F., SYR

Big East Preseason Player of the Year: Austin Freeman, G., Georgetown
Big East Preseason Rookie of the Year: Fab Melo, C., Syracuse

Preseason national polls

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AP[24] Coaches[25] Athlon Lindy's Sporting News[26] Fox Sports[27] CBS Sports[28] Rivals.com Blue Ribbon Yearbook
Cincinnati
Connecticut RV
DePaul
Georgetown 20 21 17 17
Louisville RV
Marquette RV
Notre Dame
Pittsburgh 5 4 8 5 10 6 5 4 4
Providence
Rutgers
St. John's
Seton Hall
South Florida
Syracuse 10 13 9 21 7 20 20 8 13
Villanova 6 6 6 13 11 7 9 7 6
West Virginia RV RV 19 23

Watchlists

On October 4, the Wooden Award preseason watch list included seven Big East players. The watchlist was composed of 50 players who were not transfers, freshmen or medical redshirts.[29] On October 29, the Naismith College Player of the Year watchlist of 50 players was announced, which included seven Big East names.[30]

Wooden[29] Naismith[30]
Corey Fisher, VILL Green tickY Green tickY
Austin Freeman, GTWN Green tickY Green tickY
Ashton Gibbs, PITT Green tickY Green tickY
Jeremy Hazell, HALL Green tickY Green tickY
Kevin Jones, WVU Green tickY
Kris Joseph, SYR Green tickY Green tickY
Brandon Triche, SYR Green tickY
Kemba Walker, CONN Green tickY Green tickY

Regular season

Season summary & highlights

  • Pittsburgh won the 2K Sports Coaches vs. Cancer Classic, defeating Texas in the finals, 68–66.[31]
  • Georgetown won the Charleston Classic, defeating North Carolina State, 82–67.[32]
  • Connecticut won the Maui Invitational Tournament, upsetting #2 Michigan State in the semifinals, 70–67, and #8 Kentucky in the finals, 84–67.[33][34] The wins propelled Connecticut from receiving votes in the AP Poll on November 22 to a #7 ranking on the next poll date, November 29.
  • St. John's won the Great Alaska Shootout, defeating Arizona State, 67–58.[35]
  • Notre Dame won the Old Spice Classic, defeating Wisconsin, 58–51.[36]
  • Syracuse won the Legends Classic, defeating Georgia Tech, 80–76.[37]
  • On February 23, Providence's Marshon Brooks scored 52 points in a loss to Notre Dame, breaking the Big East single-game record of 48 points set by Providence's Eric Murdock in 1991.
  • In February, following the result of an investigation into recruiting violations, Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun was suspended by the NCAA for three Big East games during the 2011–12 season.[38] The investigation began after a March 2009 Yahoo! Sports report that a former team manager and agent provided former recruit Nate Miles with housing, transportation, meals and representation, that members of Calhoun's staff were aware of this, and that staff members were in violation of NCAA limits on contacting Miles. Dennis Thomas, chairman of the NCAA Committee on Infractions, stated that Calhoun was cited for "not being on top of these issues with the agent, the booster."[38] The team will also be required to forfeit one scholarship, from 13 to 12, and 40 recruiting days, from 130 to 90, for the three upcoming seasons, and will be on probation until February 21, 2014.
  • On March 5, Providence's Marshon Brooks scored 28 points in a regular season-ending win over Rutgers, giving him 468 points for the Big East regular season, breaking the previous single-season record of 462 points set in 1994 by Donyell Marshall of Connecticut.
  • On the same day, Syracuse beat DePaul by 48 points, 107–59, in the most lopsided victory in the history of Big East conference play.[39] The Orange also had 12 players combine for 71.4 percent field goal shooting, as well as 77.8 percent from 3-point range and 90.9 percent at the foul line.

Midseason watchlists

On January 6, the Wooden Award midseason watchlist was released, and included five Big East players.[40] The list was composed of 30 players, reduced from the preseason list of 50. Newcomers included senior forward Marshon Brooks of Providence, senior forward Rick Jackson of Syracuse, and senior guard Brad Wanamaker of Pittsburgh. In addition, five Big East players who were on the preseason list did not appear at midseason: Corey Fisher, Ashton Gibbs, Jeremy Hazell, Kris Joseph, and Brandon Triche.[40] On February 11, the Naismith Top 30 was announced, and included newcomers Jackson, Wanamaker, and Notre Dame guard Ben Hansbrough.[41] Meanwhile, Fisher, Gibbs, Hazell, Kevin Jones, and Joseph, who were on the preseason list, did not appear at midseason.

Wooden[40] Naismith[41]
Marshon Brooks, PROV Green tickY
Austin Freeman, GTWN Green tickY Green tickY
Ben Hansbrough, ND Green tickY
Rick Jackson, SYR Green tickY Green tickY
Kemba Walker, CONN Green tickY Green tickY
Brad Wanamaker, PITT Green tickY Green tickY

Statistical leaders

The regular season team, individual, and attendance figures include all conference and non-conference games played from November 8, 2010 through March 5, 2011.[42]

Team



Individual


Attendance

Rk Team Home Gms. Home Att. Avg. Home Away Gms. Away Att. Avg. Away Neut. Gms. Neut. Att. Avg. Neut. Total Gms. Total Att. Avg.
1 Syracuse 19 423,924 22,312 9 145,534 16,170 3 30,935 10,312 31 600,393 19,368
2 Louisville 21 458,463 21,832 10 100,117 10,012 0 0 0 31 558,580 18,019
3 Marquette 18 280,545 15,586 11 116,060 10,551 2 n/a n/a 31 396,605 13,676*
4 West Virginia 14 160,567 11,469 11 146,510 13,319 5 50,467 10,093 30 357,544 11,918
5 Georgetown 14 177,448 12,675 12 150,068 12,506 4 23,403 5,851 30 350,919 11,697
6 Pittsburgh 18 195,182 10,843 9 103,829 11,537 4 51,959 12,990 31 350,970 11,322
7 Connecticut 17 196,671 11,569 10 132,723 13,272 3 7,200 2,400 30 336,594 11,220
8 Villanova 17 178,692 10,511 12 117,343 9,779 2 13,974 6,987 31 310,009 10,000
9 Seton Hall 15 119,060 7,937 11 123,899 11,264 4 3,365 3,365** 31 246,324 9,123**
10 St. John's 15 126,466 8,431 12 121,573 10,131 3 15,270 5,090 30 263,309 8,777
11 Notre Dame 17 132,350 7,785 9 111,886 12,432 4 9,333 3,111† 30 253,569 8,743†
12 DePaul 17 130,486 7,676 10 116,571 11,657 3 4,995 2,498‡ 30 252,052 8,691‡
13 Cincinnati 18 132,194 7,344 12 122,472 10,206 1 6,016 6,016 31 260,682 8,409
14 Providence 19 133,815 7,043 10 122,776 12,278 2 745 372 31 257,336 8,301
15 Rutgers 16 89,636 5,602 11 100,118 9,102 3 29,786 9,929 30 219,540 7,318
16 South Florida 16 67,674 4,230 13 88,381 6,799 2 1,100 1,100§ 31 157,155 5,239§
  TOTALS 271 3,003,173 11,082 172 1,919,860 11,162 45 248,548 6,717^ 488 5,171,581 10,774^
* – does not factor two neutral games played, vs. Duke and Gonzaga, in the 2010 CBE Classic, which do not have attendance figures on record.[43][44] Overall average is therefore calculated based on the 29 games with attendance figures.
** – does not factor three neutral games played, vs. Alabama, Clemson, and Arkansas, which do not have attendance figures on record.[45][46][47] Averages are therefore calculated based on the one neutral game and 27 total games with attendance figures.
† – does not factor one neutral game played, vs. Kentucky, in the 2010 SEC/Big East Invitational, which does not have an attendance figure on record.[48] Averages are therefore calculated based on the 3 neutral games and 29 total games with attendance figures.
‡ – does not factor one neutral game played, vs. Stanford, in the 2010 76 Classic, which does not have an attendance figure on record.[49] Averages are therefore calculated based on the 2 neutral games and 29 total games with attendance figures.
§ – does not factor one neutral game played, vs. Texas Tech, in the 2010 South Padre Island Invitational, which does not have an attendance figure on record.[50] Averages are therefore calculated based on the one neutral game and 30 total games with attendance figures.
^ – due to games without attendance figures, overall averages are therefore calculated based on the 37 neutral games and 480 total games with attendance figures.

Postseason

Big East Tournament

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For the third straight year, all 16 teams in the conference participated in the Big East Tournament.[51] Under this format, the teams finishing 9 through 16 in the regular season standings played first round games, while teams 5 through 8 received a bye to the second round. The top 4 teams during the regular season received a bye to the quarterfinals. The five-round tournament spanned five consecutive days, from Tuesday, March 8, through Saturday, March 12, at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

2011 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament seeds and results[51]
Seed School Conf. Over. Tiebreaker[52] First Round
Tuesday, March 8
Second Round
Wednesday, March 9
Quarterfinals
Thursday, March 10
Semifinals
Friday, March 11
Championship
Saturday, March 12
1. ‡†Pittsburgh 15–3 27–5 BYE BYE #9 CONN, L, 74–76[53]
2. Notre Dame 14–4 26–6 BYE BYE #7 CIN – W, 89–51[54] #3 LOU – L, 77–83OT[55]
3. Louisville 12–6 25–9 2–0 vs. SYR/SJU BYE BYE #11 MARQ – W, 81–56[56] #2 ND – W, 83–77OT #9 CONN – L, 66–69[5]
4. Syracuse 12–6 26–7 1–1 vs. LOU/SJU BYE BYE #5 SJU – W, 79–73[57] #9 CONN – L, 71–76OT[58]
5. #St. John's 12–6 21–11 0–2 vs. LOU/SYR BYE #13 RUT – W, 65–63[59] #4 SYR – L, 73–79
6. #West Virginia 11–7 20–11 1–0 vs. CIN BYE #11 MARQ – L, 61–67[60]
7. #Cincinnati 11–7 25–8 0–1 vs. WVU BYE #15 USF – W, 87–61[61] #2 ND – L, 51–89
8. #Georgetown 10–8 21–10 BYE #9 CONN – L, 62–79[62]
9. Connecticut 9–9 26–9 2–1 vs. VILL/MARQ #16 DEP – W, 97–71[4] #8 GTWN – W, 79–62 #1 PITT – W, 76–74 #4 SYR – W, 76–71OT #3 LOU – W, 69–66
10. Villanova 9–9. 21–11 1–1 vs. CONN/MARQ #15 USF – L, 69–70[63]
11. Marquette 9–9 20–14 1–2 vs. CONN/VILL #14 PROV – W, 87–66[64] #6 WVU – W, 67–61 #3 LOU – L, 56–81
12. Seton Hall 7–11 13–18 #13 RUT – L, 70–76OT[65]
13. Rutgers 5–13 15–17 #12 HALL – W, 76–70OT #5 SJU – L, 63–65
14. Providence 4–14 15–17 #11 MARQ – L, 66–87
15. South Florida 3–14 10–23 #10 VILL – W, 70–69 #7 CIN – L, 61–87
16. DePaul 1–17 7–24 #9 CONN – L, 71–97
‡ – Big East regular season champions, and tournament No. 1 seed.
† – Received a double-bye in the conference tournament.
# – Received a single-bye in the conference tournament.
Overall records include all games played in the Big East Tournament.

Highlights

  • Connecticut won their first Big East Tournament game in six years, by defeating DePaul, 97–71, in the first round.[4] Their last win came in 2005 against Georgetown, 66–62, in the quarterfinals. In the six intervening losses, the Huskies were beaten three times by Syracuse, including a Big East record six-overtime, 127–117 decision in the 2009 quarterfinals.[66]
  • In a controversial finish to a second round game, St. John's defeated Rutgers, 65–63, allowing the Red Storm to advance to the quarterfinals for the first time since 2003.[67] The final seconds of the game were heavily criticized by analysts, including the live ESPN crew, for a lack of officiating that appeared to hinder the Scarlet Knights' late rally, including two uncalled personal fouls against Red Storm players, and an incident in which St. John's forward Justin Brownlee appeared to prematurely celebrate by traveling, stepping out of bounds, and throwing the ball into the stands with more than a second remaining in the game.[67][68][69][70] Rutgers' head coach Mike Rice Jr. could be seen screaming frantically for an explanation for the missed calls, while officials Jim Burr, Tim Higgins and Earl Walton had already left the court.[67] At end of the game, ESPN analyst Doris Burke was quoted as saying, "this was the bizarrest ending of a game I've ever seen," and in a later post-game analysis that "the officials won't sleep tonight."[71][72] Analyst Fran Fraschilla also added that the officiating "crew lost its composure."[71] Following the game, the head of the NCAA's officiating arm, John Adams, who is in charge of selecting 98 officials for the NCAA Tournament, called the lack of officiating "unacceptable," but would still consider the overall body of work of each official throughout the season to determine whether or not they would be invited to the tournament.[73] Big East commissioner John Marinatto released a statement acknowledging "two separate officiating errors" that occurred at the end of the game, but conceded that "neither error is reviewable or correctable under NCAA playing rules."[73] The following day, the conference announced that all three officials had voluntarily withdrawn themselves from the remainder of the tournament, which was, according to Marinatto, "in the best interests of everyone involved — including coaches, student-athletes, game officials and Big East member institutions."[74]

NCAA Tournament

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At the finish of the regular season, prior to seeding for the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, it was widely speculated that the Big East would eclipse its NCAA record 8 bids, sending as many as 11 teams to the tournament.[6][7][8] The official tournament selection process took place on Sunday, March 13, and the predictions were accurate, as the following 11 Big East teams received bids into the tournament:[9]

Seed Region School Round of 64 Round of 32 Sweet 16 Elite Eight Final Four Championship
3 West Connecticut #14 BucknellW, 81–52[75] #6 CincinnatiW, 69–58[76] #2 San Diego StateW, 74–67[77] #5 ArizonaW, 65–63[78] #4 KentuckyW, 56–55[79] #8 ButlerW, 53–41[80]
11 East Marquette #6 XavierW, 66–55[81] #3 SyracuseW, 66–62[82] #2 North CarolinaL, 81–63[83]      
1 Southeast Pittsburgh #16 UNC-AshevilleW, 74–51[84] #8 ButlerL, 70–71[85]        
2 Southwest Notre Dame #15 AkronW, 69–56[86] #10 Florida StateL, 57–71        
3 East Syracuse #14 Indiana StateW, 77–60[87] #11 MarquetteL, 62–66[82]        
5 East West Virginia #12 ClemsonW, 84–76[88] #4 KentuckyL, 63–71[89]        
6 West Cincinnati #11 MissouriW, 78–63[90] #3 ConnecticutL, 58–69[76]        
4 Southwest Louisville #13 Morehead StateL, 61–62[91]          
6 Southeast St. John's #11 GonzagaL, 71–86[92]          
6 Southwest Georgetown #11 VCUL, 56–74[93]          
9 East Villanova #8 George MasonL, 57–61[94]          
11 Bids W-L (%): 7–4 (.636) 2–5 (.286) 1–1 (.500) 1–0 (1.000) 1–0 (1.000) TOTAL: 13–10 (.565)

After winning the 2011 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Connecticut continued its winning streak all the way to the Final Four in Houston, Texas, defeating Butler in the national championship game for their third national title in school history.[10] Connecticut guard Kemba Walker was named the tournament Most Outstanding Player.[95] Fellow Connecticut guard Jeremy Lamb was also named to the Final Four All-Tournament team.[95] In addition, Walker and Lamb were named to the West All-Regional team, the only Big East players to be named to an All-Region team in the tournament.[96]

National Invitation Tournament

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No Big East teams were selected to play in the 2011 National Invitation Tournament.

Rankings

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Legend
    Improvement in ranking.
  Drop in ranking.
RV Received votes, but were not ranked.
AP AP Poll.[97]
C ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll.[98]
2010–11 Big East Conference Weekly Rankings
Pre Wk 1 Wk 2 Wk 3 Wk 4 Wk 5 Wk 6 Wk 7 Wk 8 Wk 9 Wk 10 Wk 11 Wk 12 Wk 13 Wk 14 Wk 15 Wk 16 Wk 17 Wk 18 FINAL
Cincinnati AP RV RV RV RV RV 24 25 25 RV RV RV RV 25 RV n/a
C RV RV RV RV 25 RV RV RV RV RV RV
Connecticut AP RV RV RV 7 6 4 4 4 8 10 8 5 6 10 13 14 16 21 9 n/a
C 9 6 4 4 4 9 9 8 5 7 9 12 15 16 19 8 1
DePaul AP n/a
C
Georgetown AP 20 20 16 16 9 15 10 9 13 22 23 21 13 11 9 11 17 22 RV n/a
C 21 21 16 14 10 13 9 9 13 19 23 20 14 11 9 11 17 22 25 RV
Louisville AP RV RV 24 20 RV 22 RV 18 19 23 15 16 16 16 11 14 14 n/a
C RV RV RV RV 21 25 20 23 17 15 19 13 15 16 16 11 14 11 22
Marquette AP RV RV RV RV RV n/a
C RV RV RV RV 20
Notre Dame AP 25 23 24 22 15 14 9 16 15 9 8 8 9 8 4 5 n/a
C RV 23 23 20 15 15 11 16 14 8 7 7 9 7 4 6 14
Pittsburgh AP 5 5 5 3 3 8 6 6 5 5 5 2 4 4 4 4 4 3 4 n/a
C 4 4 5 3 3 8 6 6 5 5 4 2 4 4 4 6 5 3 4 12
Providence AP n/a
C
Rutgers AP n/a
C
St. John's AP RV RV RV RV 23 15 17 18 n/a
C RV 25 15 18 19
Seton Hall AP n/a
C
South Florida AP n/a
C
Syracuse AP 10 10 9 8 8 5 5 5 4 4 3 9 17 12 17 17 12 11 12 n/a
C 13 11 10 7 7 5 5 5 4 4 3 10 17 13 20 20 12 11 14 18
Villanova AP 6 6 7 12 12 10 8 8 7 7 7 8 12 9 15 15 19 RV RV n/a
C 6 7 7 12 12 11 8 8 7 7 7 7 12 10 14 14 19 RV
West Virginia AP RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 21 RV 25 25 RV RV RV 20 22 n/a
C RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV

Awards and honors

Conference awards and teams

The following individuals received postseason honors after having been chosen by the Big East Conference coaches.

2011 Big East Men's Basketball Individual Awards
Award Recipient(s)
Player of the Year[99] Ben Hansbrough, G., NOTRE DAME
Coach of the Year[99] Mike Brey, NOTRE DAME
Defensive Player of the Year[100] Rick Jackson, F., SYRACUSE
Rookie of the Year[99] Cleveland Melvin, F., DePAUL
Scholar-Athlete of the Year[101] Tim Abromaitis, F., NOTRE DAME
Most Improved Player[100] Dwight Hardy, G., ST. JOHN'S
Sixth Man Award[100] Justin Burrell, F., ST. JOHN'S
Sportsmanship Award[100] Brad Wanamaker, G., PITTSBURGH

The Player of the Year, Coach of the Year, Rookie of the Year, and Scholar Athlete of the Year awards were announced on Tuesday, March 8, after the post-game interviews of the first session of the first round of the Big East Tournament. The remainder of the individual awards were announced on Monday, March 7, while the All-Big East Men's Basketball Teams were announced on Sunday, March 6.[100][102] Awardees are chosen by a simple ballot, in which coaches are not allowed to vote for their players or themselves (in the case of the Big East Coach of the Year). Coaches voted for Big East Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year from the first team and all-rookie lists, respectively.[102]

Notre Dame senior guard Ben Hansbrough was named Player of the Year, and head coach Mike Brey was named Coach of the Year, after both leading the Fighting Irish to a surprising second-place finish in the conference regular season, with a record of 14–4.[99] Hansbrough finished the regular season with a team-high 18.5 points per game, and was noted for his all-around quality of play, team leadership, and high efficiency shooting, including .492 field goal shooting, .451 from 3 point range, and .818 at the foul line.[42] Fellow teammate Tim Abromaitis, a senior forward, received the Scholar Athlete of the Year award for the second year in a row, and was only the third player to receive the award in consecutive years.[101]

Defensive Player of the Year Rick Jackson, a senior guard from Syracuse, was chosen for his shot-blocking and rebounding dominance, having led the Big East in both of these statistics during both the conference and non-conference season.[100] This included a leading average of 10.7 rebounds per game, 7.2 defensive rebounds per game, and 2.5 blocks per game.[42]

DePaul freshman forward Cleveland Melvin was named Rookie of the Year, after leading the Blue Demons in scoring, at 14.3 points per game, the highest average for a freshman in the league.[42][99]

Other awardees included most improved player Dwight Hardy, who was credited with helping lead St. John's to a surprising resurgence in the conference, to a tie for third-place finish, with a conference fourth-best 17.9 points per game. Hardy's teammate Justin Burrell was also honored with the Sixth Man Award, for being key to the Red Storm's success, averaging 6.6 points on 51.1 percent shooting, 5.0 rebounds and 21.1 minutes off the bench. Finally, Pittsburgh senior guard Brad Wanamaker received the Sportsmanship Award for his all-around contribution to the team, as its captain, its leader in rebounds, assists, and steals (at 5.3, 5.2, and 1.5 per game, respectively), and its second-highest scorer (at 11.9 per game).[42][100][103]

2011 All-Big East Men's Basketball Teams[102]
First Team Second Team Third Team Honorable Mention All-Rookie Team
Kemba Walker, G., CONN
Austin Freeman, G., GTWN
Ben Hansbrough†, G., ND
Ashton Gibbs, G., PITT
Marshon Brooks, G/F., PROV
Dwight Hardy, G., SJU
Preston Knowles, G., LOU
Darius Johnson-Odom, G., MARQ
Brad Wanamaker, G., PITT
Rick Jackson, F., SYR
Corey Fisher, G., VILL
Chris Wright, G., GTWN
Tim Abromaitis, F., ND
Jeremy Hazell, G., HALL
Kris Joseph, F., SYR
Corey Stokes, G., VILL
Peyton Siva, G., LOU
Jimmy Butler, F., MARQ
Brandon Triche, G., SYR
Kevin Jones, G., WVU
Sean Kilpatrick, G., CIN
Jeremy Lamb, G., CONN
Shabazz Napier, G., CONN
Cleveland Melvin†, F., DEP
Brandon Young, G., DEP
Gilvydas Biruta, F., RUT
- denotes unanimous selection

On the All-Big East Men's Basketball Teams, notable members of the first team included Hansbrough, Hardy, and Providence senior guard/forward Marshon Brooks, who were all given no all-conference consideration prior to the start of the season. Brooks led the conference in scoring, averaging 24.8 points per game, including a Big East single-game record 52 points in a loss to Notre Dame on February 23, 2010.[102][104] On the All-Rookie Team, DePaul forward Cleveland Melvin was the only player to receive a unanimous selection. Notably absent from the list was Preseason Rookie of the Year Fab Melo, a center from Syracuse, who only averaged 9.4 minutes and 2.2 points off the bench.[105]

National awards and teams

Players

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Connecticut guard Kemba Walker was recognized as a consensus First Team All-American after being named to the first team All-American lists by the Associated Press,[106] the USBWA,[107] the NABC,[108] and Sporting News.[109] Notre Dame guard Ben Hansbrough was a consensus Second Team All-American after being named to the Second Team by all four selecting bodies.[106][107][108][109] In addition, Providence forward Marshon Brooks was selected as a Third Team All-American by the Associated Press.[106] Pittsburgh guard Brad Wanamaker, Syracuse forward Rick Jackson, St. John's guard Dwight Hardy, Georgetown guard Austin Freeman, and Pittsburgh guard Ashton Gibbs were all named Honorable Mention All-Americans by the Associated Press.[106]

Walker was also selected as the winner of the Bob Cousy Award for the nation's best point guard,[110] and won the second-ever Lute Olson Award for the most outstanding non-freshman in the nation.[111]

For the second consecutive year, Notre Dame senior forward Tim Abromaitis was named to the men's basketball Academic All-America First Team, by CoSIDA and ESPN The Magazine.[112] A graduate student, Abromaitis was pursuing an MBA, specializing in finance, and achieved a 3.72 GPA during his penultimate season with the Fighting Irish.

Award finalists

On March 14, the Wooden Award final ballot was released, and included four Big East players.[113] The list was composed of 20 players, reduced from the midseason list of 30. St. John's guard Dwight Hardy and Notre Dame guard Ben Hansbrough were newcomers to the list, while three Big East players who were on the midseason list did not appear on the final ballot: Austin Freeman, Rick Jackson, and Brad Wanamaker.[113] On March 20, Kemba Walker was named one of four finalists for the Naismith Award.[114]

Wooden[113] Naismith[114]
Marshon Brooks, PROV Green tickY
Ben Hansbrough, ND Green tickY
Dwight Hardy, SJU Green tickY
Kemba Walker, CONN Green tickY Green tickY

BYU guard Jimmer Fredette was chosen as both the 2011 Wooden Award and 2011 Naismith Award recipient.[115][116]

Coaches

Notre Dame head coach Mike Brey was named the Associated Press Coach of the Year,[117] and was selected for the Henry Iba Award by the USBWA.[118]

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Big East Conference Overall Statistical Leaders". BigEast.org. Retrieved 03-06-2011. Note: Attendance figures account for all regular season games played at a team's home arena. Games played away or at neutral sites, or during the preseason or postseason are not counted, to prevent redundancies.
  2. "Big East Conference Standings - 2010-11." ESPN.com. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
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