Mr. Basketball USA

Mr. Basketball USA, formerly known as the ESPN RISE National Player of the Year and EA SPORTS National Player of the Year, is an award presented to the United States boys' high school basketball national player of the year by Ballislife.com. Before 1996, retroactive recognition was determined for honorees going back to 1955's selectee Wilt Chamberlain, determined by National High School Hall of Fame member Doug Huff, who has been a McDonald's All-American Game selection committee member since the game's inception, CalHiSports.com Editor Mark Tennis and Ballislife.com National Editor Ronnie Flores.[1] From 1996–2002 the selections were made by Student Sports and from 2003–2009 by EA Sports.[1] From 2010–2012 the award was determined by ESPN HS until the award was taken over and executed by Flores in 2013 after his tenure with ESPN ended.

Mr. Basketball USA
Black man kneeling on one knee with a basketball resting on the other and his hand atop the basketball. He is wearing a red, white and blue Harlem Globetrotters uniform.
Wilt Chamberlain is recognized as the first Mr. Basketball USA
Awarded forHigh school basketball's top male player
CountryUnited States
Presented byBallislife (EA Sports 2003–2009; Student Sports 1996–2002)
First awarded1996 (retroactive to 1955)
Currently held byCameron Boozer

According to information posted online by Ballislife, "Selections are based on high school accomplishment, not future college/pro potential, and are reflective of those that lead their teams to state championships. Ballislife does not knowingly select fifth-year players, and those ineligible due to age or academics, Mr. Basketball USA or to its various All-American teams."[1] Furthermore, selection uses "on-the-floor performance" without regard to academics, volunteer work or most other off-the-court criteria.[2]

Current selections are made through a season-long polling process of a 10-member expert panel with a final year-end ballot to determine the winner. The panel includes five McDonald's All-American selection committee members. The panel is polled weekly for a list of the top seven national player of the year candidates regardless of graduating class. The votes are then translated into a 10-point scoring system, with 10 points for a first-place vote, nine points for second-place vote, and down to four points for a seventh-place vote.[2]

Winners

(left to right): Jerry Lucas, Kareem-Abdul Jabbar and LeBron James are recognized as the only two-time winners of Mr. Basketball USA.
GGuard
CGCombo guard
PGPoint guard
SGShooting guard
FForward
PFPower forward
SFSmall forward
CCenter
— in Runner(s)-up column indicates years in which the voting procedures and the resulting votes yielded a consensus winner with no runner(s)-up named.
— in College column indicates that player either returned to high school or went directly to professional basketball in the subsequent year.
Mr. Basketball USA Winners
YearPlayerHigh schoolCityHeightPositionCollegeRunner(s)-up
1955Wilt ChamberlainOverbrookPhiladelphia, PA7' 1"CKansasOscar Robertson
1956Oscar RobertsonCrispus AttucksIndianapolis, IN6' 5"GCincinnatiKelly Coleman, Jerry West
1957Jerry LucasMiddletownMiddletown, OH6' 8"FTony Jackson
1958Jerry LucasMiddletownMiddletown, OH6' 8"FOhio StateBill McGill, Wayne Hightower
1959Bill RafterySt. CeciliaKearny, NJ6' 5"FLaSalleArthur Heyman
1960Connie HawkinsBoysBrooklyn, NY6' 9"CIowa
1961Bill BradleyCrystal CityCrystal City, MO6' 5"FPrincetonReggie Harding, Billy Cunningham
1962Cazzie RussellCarverChicago, IL6' 5"FMichiganJohn Austin, Larry Conley
1963Edgar LacyJeffersonLos Angeles, CA6' 6"FUCLALew Alcindor
1964Lew AlcindorPower MemorialNew York, NY7' 1"CWes Unseld
1965Lew AlcindorPower MemorialNew York, NY7' 1"CUCLA
1966Calvin MurphyNorwalkNorwalk, CT5' 9"GNiagara
1967Spencer HaywoodPershingDetroit, MI6' 9"FDetroitKen Durrett, Jim McDaniels
1968Paul WestphalAviationRedondo Beach, CA6' 4"GUSCRalph Simpson
1969George McGinnisWashingtonIndianapolis, IN6' 8"FIndianaKevin Joyce
1970Tom McMillenMansfieldMansfield, PA6' 11"CMarylandBill Walton, Dwight Jones
1971Maurice LucasSchenleyPittsburgh, PA6' 9"FMarquetteRaymond Lewis, Roscoe Pondexter
1972Quinn BucknerThornridgeDolton, IL6' 3"GIndianaAlvin Adams, Phil Sellers
1973Adrian DantleyDeMathaHyattsville, MD6' 6"FNotre DameKent Benson, Tom LaGarde
1974Moses MalonePetersburgPetersburg, VA6' 11"CSkip Wise
1975Bill CartwrightElk GroveElk Grove, CA7' 1"CSan FranciscoDavid Greenwood, Darryl Dawkins
1976Darrell GriffithMaleLouisville, KY6' 4"GLouisvilleAlbert King
1977Albert KingFort HamiltonBrooklyn, NY6' 6"FMarylandMagic Johnson, Gene Banks
1978Mark AguirreWestinghouseChicago, IL6' 6"FDePaulDwight Anderson
1979Clark KelloggSt. JosephCleveland, OH6' 7"FOhio StateIsiah Thomas, Ralph Sampson
1980Doc RiversProviso EastMaywood, IL6' 4"GMarquettePatrick Ewing, Earl Jones
1981Patrick EwingRindge & LatinCambridge, MA7' 1"CGeorgetown
1982Wayman TisdaleWashingtonTulsa, OK6' 9"FOklahomaBilly Thompson
1983Reggie WilliamsDunbarBaltimore, MD6' 7"SFGeorgetownDwayne Washington
1984John WilliamsCrenshawLos Angeles, CA6' 9"SFLSUDanny Manning, Delray Brooks
1985Danny FerryDeMathaHyattsville, MD6' 10"FDukeJeff Lebo
1986J. R. ReidKempsvilleVirginia Beach, VA6' 10"CNorth CarolinaRex Chapman, Terry Mills
1987Larry JohnsonSkylineDallas, TX6' 7"FUNLVMarcus Liberty
1988Alonzo MourningIndian RiverChesapeake, VA6' 10"CGeorgetownShawn Kemp, Billy Owens
1989Kenny AndersonArchbishop MolloyBriarwood, NY6' 1"PGGeorgia Tech
1990Damon BaileyNorth LawrenceBedford, IN6' 3"GIndianaEd O'Bannon
1991Chris WebberCountry DayBeverly Hills, MI6' 10"CMichiganGlenn Robinson
1992Jason KiddSt. JosephAlameda, CA6' 4"PGCaliforniaRodrick Rhodes
1993Rasheed WallaceSimon GratzPhiladelphia, PA6' 11"FNorth CarolinaJerry Stackhouse, Randy Livingston
1994Felipe LópezRiceNew York, NY6' 5"SGSt. John's
1995Kevin GarnettMauldin / FarragutMauldin, SC / Chicago, IL6' 10"CRon Mercer, Stephon Marbury
1996Mike BibbyShadow MountainPhoenix, AZ6' 1"PGArizonaKobe Bryant, Tim Thomas
1997Tracy McGradyAuburndale / Mount ZionAuburndale, FL / Durham, NC6' 7"SFLamar Odom
1998Rashard LewisElsikHouston, TX6' 10"FRonald Curry, JaRon Rush
1999Jonathan BenderPicayunePicayune, MS6' 11"FDonnell Harvey
2000Darius MilesEast St. LouisEast St. Louis, IL6' 9"FZach Randolph, Gerald Wallace
2001Dajuan WagnerCamdenCamden, NJ6' 2"CGMemphisTyson Chandler, Eddy Curry
2002LeBron JamesSt. Vincent – St. MaryAkron, OH6' 8"GCarmelo Anthony
2003LeBron JamesSt. Vincent – St. MaryAkron, OH6' 8"GChris Paul
2004Sebastian TelfairLincolnBrooklyn, NY6' 1"PGDwight Howard
2005Monta EllisLanierJackson, MS6' 3"SGGreg Oden
2006Greg OdenLawrence NorthIndianapolis, IN7' 1"COhio StateKevin Durant
2007O. J. MayoHuntingtonHuntington, WV6' 5"GUSCKevin Love, Derrick Rose
2008Brandon JenningsDominguez / Oak Hill AcademyCompton, CA / Mouth of Wilson, VA6' 1"PGSamardo Samuels
2009Derrick FavorsSouth AtlantaAtlanta, GA6' 9"PFGeorgia TechDeMarcus Cousins, Avery Bradley, Jr.
2010Harrison BarnesAmesAmes, IA6' 7"SFNorth CarolinaJared Sullinger
2011Mike GilchristSt. PatrickElizabeth, NJ6' 7"SFKentuckyAustin Rivers, Bradley Beal
2012Shabazz MuhammadBishop GormanLas Vegas, NV6' 6"SFUCLAJabari Parker
2013Andrew WigginsVaughn/HuntingtonVaughan, ON/Huntington, WV6' 8"SFKansasJabari Parker
2014Cliff AlexanderCurieChicago, IL6' 9"PFKansasStanley Johnson
2015Ben SimmonsMontverdeMontverde, FL6' 10"PFLSUJaylen Brown
2016Lonzo BallChino HillsChino Hills, CA6' 6"PGUCLAJosh Jackson
2017Michael Porter Jr.Nathan HaleSeattle, WA6' 10"SFMissouriDeandre Ayton
2018RJ BarrettMontverdeMontverde, FL6' 7"SGDukeZion Williamson
2019Isaiah StewartLa LumiereLa Porte, IN6' 9"PFWashingtonCole Anthony
2020Cade CunninghamMontverdeMontverde, FL6' 7"PGOklahoma StateEvan Mobley, Jalen Green
2021Chet HolmgrenMinnehahaMinneapolis, MN7' 0"CGonzagaJabari Smith Jr.
2022Dariq WhiteheadMontverdeMontverde, FL6' 5"SFDukeKeyonte George, Dereck Lively
2023Cameron BoozerChristopher Columbus High SchoolWestchester, FL6' 9"PFIsaiah Collier

Source:[3]

See also

Notes

External links