Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year

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ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year
Atlantic Coast Conference 2014 logo.png
Awarded for the most outstanding male basketball player in the Atlantic Coast Conference
Country United States
Presented by Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association (1954–present)
ACC head coaches (2013–present)
First awarded 1954
Currently held by Jahlil Okafor, Duke
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The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Men's Basketball Player of the Year is a basketball award given to the men's basketball player in the Atlantic Coast Conference voted as the most outstanding player. It has been presented since the league's first season, 1953–54, by the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association, and beginning in 2012–13 has also been presented in separate voting by the league's head coaches. The award was first given to Dickie Hemric of Wake Forest,[1] and the coaches' award was first presented in 2013 to Shane Larkin of Miami.[2]

Two players have won the award three times: David Thompson of North Carolina State and Ralph Sampson of Virginia.[3] Hemric, Len Chappell, Larry Miller, John Roche, Len Bias, Danny Ferry, Tim Duncan and J. J. Redick have won the award twice. There have been two ties in the award's history, which occurred at the end of the 2000–01 and 2012–13 seasons: In 2000–01 Joseph Forte of North Carolina and Shane Battier of Duke shared the award;[4] and Erick Green of Virginia Tech and Larkin shared honors in 2012–13. Green and Larkin split the honor in the first year that the ACC began voting for players of the year by the conference's coaches and media separately (the media chose Green while the coaches chose Larkin).[2][5]

Twelve players have received either the Naismith or Wooden National Player of the Year awards in the same year that they received an ACC Player of the Year award.[a] North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough is the most recent player to achieve this; the consensus national player of the year in 2008, he won every major national award in addition to the conference player of the year award. Duke has the most ACC Players of the Year winners with 15. Each of the original 1953 ACC members has had at least one of its players win the award. Five ACC members have not had a winner: Florida State, Louisville, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, and Syracuse. However, of these schools, only Florida State joined the ACC before 2013. As of 2015, the award has been given 63 times in 62 seasons. Fifty-one different players from ten schools have received the award: thirty-five seniors, twenty-two juniors, eight sophomores, and one freshman.

Key

Co-Players of the Year
* Awarded a national Player of the Year award:
Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year (1904–05 to 1978–79)
UPI College Basketball Player of the Year (1954–55 to 1995–96)
Naismith College Player of the Year (1968–69 to present)
John R. Wooden Award (1976–77 to present)
M ACC media selection (2013–present)
C ACC coaches' selection (2013–present)
Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player had been awarded the ACC Player of the Year award at that point

Winners

A man of darker complexion wearing a red basketball uniform dunks.
Michael Jordan won the award in 1984 as a junior while playing as a Tar Heel.
File:Tim duncan vs wizards 2009 cropped.jpg
Wake Forest's Tim Duncan won in 1996 and 1997.
A man of darker complexion wearing a white uniform, on the jersey of which the word "WIZARDS" is printed.
Antawn Jamison won in 1998 while playing for North Carolina.
A fair-skinned man is dribbles a basketball. He is wearing a blue basketball uniform with the word "ORLANDO" on the jersey.
J. J. Redick captured back-to-back ACC Player of the Year Awards in 2005 and 2006 as a Duke Blue Devil.
Season Player School Position Class[b] Reference
1953–54 Dickie Hemric Wake Forest Center Junior [1]
1954–55 Dickie Hemric (2) Wake Forest Center Senior [1]
1955–56 Ronnie Shavlik NC State Center Senior [6]
1956–57 Lennie Rosenbluth* North Carolina Power forward Senior [7]
1957–58 Pete Brennan North Carolina Small forward Senior [7]
1958–59 Lou Pucillo NC State Point guard Senior [6]
1959–60 Lee Shaffer North Carolina Power forward / Center Senior [7]
1960–61 Len Chappell Wake Forest Power forward / Center Junior [8]
1961–62 Len Chappell (2) Wake Forest Power forward / Center Senior [8]
1962–63 Art Heyman* Duke Shooting guard / Small forward Senior [9]
1963–64 Jeff Mullins Duke Small forward Senior [9]
1964–65 Billy Cunningham North Carolina Guard / Forward Senior [7]
1965–66 Steve Vacendak Duke Point guard Senior [9]
1966–67 Larry Miller North Carolina Shooting guard Junior [7]
1967–68 Larry Miller (2) North Carolina Shooting guard Senior [7]
1968–69 John Roche South Carolina Point guard / Shooting guard Sophomore [10]
1969–70 John Roche (2) South Carolina Point guard / Shooting guard Junior [10]
1970–71 Charlie Davis[c] Wake Forest Guard Senior [11]
1971–72 Barry Parkhill Virginia Shooting guard Junior [12]
1972–73 David Thompson NC State Shooting guard / Small forward Sophomore [6]
1973–74 David Thompson (2) NC State Shooting guard / Small forward Junior [6]
1974–75 David Thompson* (3) NC State Shooting guard / Small forward Senior [6]
1975–76 Mitch Kupchak North Carolina Power forward Senior [7]
1976–77 Rod Griffin Wake Forest Power forward Junior [13]
1977–78 Phil Ford North Carolina Point guard Senior [7]
1978–79 Mike Gminski Duke Center Junior [9]
1979–80 Albert King Maryland Guard / Forward Junior [14]
1980–81 Ralph Sampson* Virginia Center Sophomore [3]
1981–82 Ralph Sampson* (2) Virginia Center Junior [3]
1982–83 Ralph Sampson* (3) Virginia Center Senior [3]
1983–84 Michael Jordan* North Carolina Shooting guard Junior [7]
1984–85 Len Bias Maryland Small forward Junior [14]
1985–86 Len Bias (2) Maryland Small forward Senior [14]
1986–87 Horace Grant Clemson Power forward Senior [13]
1987–88 Danny Ferry Duke Center Junior [9]
1988–89 Danny Ferry* (2) Duke Center Senior [9]
1989–90 Dennis Scott Georgia Tech Small forward Junior [13]
1990–91 Rodney Monroe NC State Shooting guard Senior [6]
1991–92 Christian Laettner* Duke Center Senior [9]
1992–93 Rodney Rogers Wake Forest Small forward / Guard Junior [13]
1993–94 Grant Hill Duke Shooting guard / Small forward Senior [3][9]
1994–95 Joe Smith* Maryland Power forward Sophomore [14]
1995–96 Tim Duncan Wake Forest Center Junior [3]
1996–97 Tim Duncan* (2) Wake Forest Center Senior [3]
1997–98 Antawn Jamison* North Carolina Power forward Junior [7]
1998–99 Elton Brand* Duke Center Sophomore [15]
1999–00 Chris Carrawell Duke Shooting guard / Small forward Senior [9]
2000–01 Shane Battier* Duke Small forward Senior [4][9]
2000–01 Joseph Forte North Carolina Shooting guard Sophomore [4][7]
2001–02 Juan Dixon Maryland Shooting guard Senior [14]
2002–03 Josh Howard Wake Forest Small forward Senior [16]
2003–04 Julius Hodge NC State Guard/Forward Junior [6][17]
2004–05 J. J. Redick Duke Shooting guard Junior [9][18]
2005–06 J. J. Redick* (2) Duke Shooting guard Senior [18]
2006–07 Jared Dudley Boston College Small forward Senior [19]
2007–08 Tyler Hansbrough* North Carolina Power forward Junior [7][20]
2008–09 Ty Lawson North Carolina Point guard Junior [7][21]
2009–10 Greivis Vasquez Maryland Point guard Senior [22]
2010–11 Nolan Smith Duke Point guard Senior [23]
2011–12 Tyler Zeller North Carolina Center Senior [24]
2012–13 Erick GreenM Virginia Tech Point guard Senior [5]
2012–13 Shane LarkinC Miami (FL) Point guard Sophomore [2]
2013–14 T. J. Warren NC State Small forward Sophomore [25][26]
2014–15 Jahlil Okafor Duke Center Freshman [27][28]

Winners by school

School (year joined)[29] Winners Years
Duke (1953) 15 1963, 1964, 1966, 1979, 1988, 1989, 1992, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2011, 2015
North Carolina (1953) 14 1957, 1958, 1960, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1976, 1978, 1984, 1998, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2012
Wake Forest (1953) 10 1954, 1955, 1961, 1962, 1971, 1977, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2003
NC State (1953) 8 1956, 1959, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1991, 2004, 2014
Maryland (1953)[d] 6 1980, 1985, 1986, 1995, 2002, 2010
Virginia (1953) 4 1972, 1981, 1982, 1983
South Carolina (1953)[e] 2 1969, 1970
Boston College (2005) 1 2007
Clemson (1953) 1 1987
Georgia Tech (1978) 1 1990
Miami (FL) (2004) 1 2013
Virginia Tech (2004) 1 2013
Florida State (1991) 0
Louisville (2014) 0
Notre Dame (2013) 0
Pittsburgh (2013) 0
Syracuse (2013) 0

Footnotes

See also

References

General
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