John R. Wooden Award
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The John R. Wooden Award is an award given annually to the most outstanding men's and women's college basketball players. The national award program consists of the men's and women's Player of the Year awards, the legend of coaching award and recognizes the All-American Teams. The awards given by the Los Angeles Athletic Club are named in honor of John Wooden, the 1932 national collegiate basketball player of the year from Purdue. Wooden was a Big Ten medal of honor winner who later taught and coached men's basketball at the collegiate level. Coach Wooden, whose teams at UCLA won 10 NCAA championships, was the first man to be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame as a player and coach. Mr. Wooden was also inducted into the Teachers Hall of Fame.
The award, which was originally given only to male athletes, was first given in 1977. Starting in 2004, the award was extended to women's basketball.
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[edit] Selection process
[edit] Men's award
Each year, the Award's National Advisory Board, a 26-member panel, selects approximately twenty candidates for Player of the Year and All-American Team honors. The candidates must be full-time students and have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 or higher throughout their college career. Players who are nominated must have made outstanding contributions to team play, both offensively and defensively, and be model citizens, exhibiting strength of character both on and off the court. The selection ballot is announced prior to the NCAA basketball tournament. The voters consist of 1,000 sportswriters and sportscasters, representing the 50 states.
The top ten vote getters are selected to the All-American Team, and the results are announced following the Elite Eight round of the NCAA Tournament. The person who receives the most votes is named the Player of the Year, and the winner is announced following the NCAA championship game.
The Player of the Year is awarded a trophy consisting of five bronze figures. The player's school receives a duplicate trophy as well as a scholarship grant. The other top four members of the All-American Team receive an All-American Team trophy, a jacket, and a scholarship grant which goes to their school. Each coach of the top five All-American Team members also receives a jacket. The All-American Team members ranked six through ten receive an All-American Team trophy and a jacket, but their schools do not receive a scholarship.
[edit] Women's award
The criteria for the women's Player of the Year award and All-American Team honors are similar to that for the men. For the women's award, the National Advisory Board consists of 12 members, and approximately 15 candidates are selected for the ballot. The voters are 250 sportswriters and sportscasters. In contrast to the men's All-American Team, only five members are selected for the women's team. The Player of the Year receives a trophy, and her school receives a duplicate trophy and a scholarship grant.
[edit] The trophy
The trophy features five bronze figures, each depicting one of the five major skills that John Wooden believed that "total" basketball player must exhibit: rebounding, passing, shooting, dribbling, and defense.
The concept for the trophy originated with Wooden Award Chairman, Richard "Duke" Llewellyn. Work began on the trophy in 1975, and sculptor Don Winton, who had sculpted many top sports awards, was given the task of designing the model of the trophy.
The figures are bronze plated and attached to a pentagonal base plate. The tallest figure is 10¼ inches high (26 cm). The trophy's base is 7½ inches high (19 cm) and is made from solid walnut. The total height of the trophy is 17¾ inches (45 cm), and it weighs 25 lb (11.3 kg).
[edit] High School Player of the Year Award
The John R. Wooden High School Player of the Year awards are given to the most valuable player in each of the five divisions of the California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section and one Los Angeles City division.
[edit] Legends of Coaching Award
The Legends of Coaching Award recognizes the lifetime achievement of coaches who exemplify Coach Wooden's high standards of coaching success and personal achievement. When selecting the individual, the Wooden Award Committee considers a coach's character, success rate on the court, graduating rate of student athletes, his coaching philosophy and his identification with the goals of the John R. Wooden Award.
- 2007 - Gene Keady, Purdue University
- 2006 - Jim Boeheim, Syracuse University
- 2005 - Jim Calhoun, University of Connecticut
- 2004 - Mike Montgomery, Stanford University
- 2003 - Roy Williams, University of Kansas/University of North Carolina
- 2002 - Denny Crum, University of Louisville
- 2001 - Lute Olson, University of Arizona
- 2000 - Mike Krzyzewski, Duke University
- 1999 - Dean Smith, University of North Carolina
[edit] Player of the Year Award winners
[edit] Men
- 2007 - Kevin Durant, Texas
- 2006 - J.J. Redick, Duke
- 2005 - Andrew Bogut, Utah
- 2004 - Jameer Nelson, Saint Joseph's
- 2003 - T. J. Ford, Texas
- 2002 - Jay Williams, Duke
- 2001 - Shane Battier, Duke
- 2000 - Kenyon Martin, Cincinnati
- 1999 - Elton Brand, Duke
- 1998 - Antawn Jamison, North Carolina
- 1997 - Tim Duncan, Wake Forest
- 1996 - Marcus Camby, UMass
- 1995 - Ed O'Bannon, UCLA
- 1994 - Glenn Robinson, Purdue
- 1993 - Calbert Cheaney, Indiana
- 1992 - Christian Laettner, Duke
- 1991 - Larry Johnson, UNLV
- 1990 - Lionel Simmons, La Salle
- 1989 - Sean Elliott, Arizona
- 1988 - Danny Manning, Kansas
- 1987 - David Robinson, Navy
- 1986 - Walter Berry, St. John's
- 1985 - Chris Mullin, St. John's
- 1984 - Michael Jordan, North Carolina
- 1983 - Ralph Sampson, Virginia
- 1982 - Ralph Sampson, Virginia
- 1981 - Danny Ainge, BYU
- 1980 - Darrell Griffith, Louisville
- 1979 - Larry Bird, Indiana State
- 1978 - Phil Ford, North Carolina
- 1977 - Marques Johnson, UCLA
[edit] Women
- 2007 - Candace Parker, University of Tennessee
- 2006 - Seimone Augustus, LSU
- 2005 - Seimone Augustus, LSU
- 2004 - Alana Beard, Duke