UPI College Basketball Player of the Year

The UPI College Basketball Player of the Year was an annual basketball award given to the best men's basketball player in NCAA Division I competition. The award was first given following the 1954–55 season and was discontinued following the 1995–96 season. It was given by United Press International (UPI), a news agency in the United States that rivaled the Associated Press but began to decline with the advent of television news.

UPI College Basketball Player of the Year
Awarded forthe most outstanding NCAA Division I men's basketball player
CountryUnited States
Presented byUnited Press International
History
First award1955
Final award1996

Five players—Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas, Lew Alcindor[a], Bill Walton and Ralph Sampson—won the award multiple times. Of these five, only Robertson, Walton and Sampson were three-time UPI Players of the Year.

UCLA had the most all-time winners with six. Ohio State was second with four winners, while Cincinnati and Virginia were tied for third with three winners apiece. Five other schools had two winners and sixteen schools had only one UPI Player of the Year.

Eight of the winners were sophomores, seven were juniors, and the remaining 27 were seniors. No freshman was ever presented the award.

Key

Player (X)Denotes the number of times the player has been awarded the Player of the Year award at that point

Winners

Bill Russell won the award in 1956.
Bill Bradley (42) won the award in 1965.
Bill Walton won the award three times from 1972–74.
David Robinson won the award in 1987.
Ray Allen was the final recipient of the award, winning it in 1996.
SeasonPlayerSchoolPositionClass
1954–55Tom GolaLa SalleFSenior
1955–56Bill RussellSan FranciscoCSenior
1956–57Chet ForteColumbiaPGSenior
1957–58Oscar RobertsonCincinnatiPGSophomore
1958–59Oscar Robertson (2)CincinnatiPGJunior
1959–60Oscar Robertson (3)CincinnatiPGSenior
1960–61Jerry LucasOhio StateF / CJunior
1961–62Jerry Lucas (2)Ohio StateF / CSenior
1962–63Art HeymanDukeG / FSenior
1963–64Gary BraddsOhio StateFSenior
1964–65Bill BradleyPrincetonSF / SGSenior
1965–66Cazzie RussellMichiganSGSenior
1966–67Lew Alcindor[a]UCLACSophomore
1967–68Elvin HayesHoustonF / CSenior
1968–69Lew Alcindor[a] (2)UCLACSenior
1969–70Pete MaravichLSUGSenior
1970–71Austin CarrNotre DameGSenior
1971–72Bill WaltonUCLACSophomore
1972–73Bill Walton (2)UCLACJunior
1973–74Bill Walton (3)UCLACSenior
1974–75David ThompsonNC StateSG / SFSenior
1975–76Scott MayIndianaFSenior
1976–77Marques JohnsonUCLAG / FSenior
1977–78Butch LeeMarquettePGSenior
1978–79Larry BirdIndiana StateSFSenior
1979–80Mark AguirreDePaulSFSophomore
1980–81Ralph SampsonVirginiaCSophomore
1981–82Ralph Sampson (2)VirginiaCJunior
1982–83Ralph Sampson (3)VirginiaCSenior
1983–84Michael JordanNorth CarolinaSGJunior
1984–85Chris MullinSt. John'sSF / SGSenior
1985–86Walter BerrySt. John'sPFSenior
1986–87David RobinsonNavyCSenior
1987–88Hersey HawkinsBradleySGSenior
1988–89Danny FerryDukePF / CSenior
1989–90Lionel SimmonsLa SalleSFSenior
1990–91Shaquille O'NealLSUCSophomore
1991–92Jim JacksonOhio StateSGJunior
1992–93Calbert CheaneyIndianaSFSenior
1993–94Glenn RobinsonPurdueSF / PFSophomore
1994–95Joe SmithMarylandCSophomore
1995–96Ray AllenConnecticutSGJunior

Winners by school

SchoolWinnersYears
UCLA61967, 1969, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1977
Ohio State41961, 1962, 1964, 1992
Cincinnati31958, 1959, 1960
Virginia31981, 1982, 1983
Duke21963, 1989
Indiana21976, 1993
La Salle21955, 1990
LSU21970, 1991
St. John's21985, 1986
Bradley11988
Columbia11957
Connecticut11996
DePaul11980
Houston11968
Indiana State11979
Marquette11978
Maryland11995
Michigan11966
Navy11987
NC State11975
North Carolina11984
Notre Dame11971
Princeton11965
Purdue11994
San Francisco11956

Notes

  • a Lew Alcindor changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1971 after converting to Islam.[1][2]

See also

References

General sources
  1. "United Press International Player of the Year". AmericasBestOnline.com. Retrieved April 12, 2010.
  2. "Men's College Basketball: Player of the Year Awards → United Press International". HickokSports.com. 2006. Archived from the original on July 11, 2012. Retrieved April 12, 2010.