ASUN Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year
ASUN Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year | |
---|---|
Awarded for | the most outstanding basketball player in the ASUN Conference |
Country | United States |
History | |
First award | 1979 |
Most recent | Darius McGhee, Liberty |
The ASUN Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year is an annual basketball award given to the ASUN Conference's most outstanding player. The award was first given following the 1978–79 season, the first year of the ASUN's existence, when it was known as the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC). Only one player, Willie Jackson of Centenary, has won the award three times (1982–84).
Centenary has the most all-time winners with six, but left the conference in 2000, when the league was still known as the TAAC. There has been only one tie in the award's history, which occurred in 1997–98 between Mark Jones of Central Florida and Sedric Webber of the College of Charleston. Among the 12 current ASUN members, only four have had a winner—Florida Gulf Coast, Liberty, Lipscomb, and North Florida. Of these four schools, only Liberty, which joined the ASUN in 2018, became a member after 2007.
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) |
Player (X) | Denotes the number of times the player has been named ASUN Player of the Year at that point |
Winners[]
Winners by school[]
School (year joined) | Winners | Years |
---|---|---|
Centenary (1978)[a] | 6 | 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1990, 1991 |
College of Charleston (1992)[b] | 4 | 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998† |
Georgia Southern (1980)[c] | 4 | 1987, 1988, 1989, 1992 |
Mercer (1978)[d] | 4 | 1981, 1985, 1993, 2014 |
East Tennessee State (2005)[d] | 3 | 2006, 2007, 2011 |
Belmont (2001)[e] | 2 | 2003, 2009 |
Florida Gulf Coast (2007) | 2 | 2013, 2018 |
Georgia State (1984)[f] | 2 | 2001, 2002 |
Liberty (2018) | 2 | 2020, 2021 |
Lipscomb (2007) | 2 | 2010, 2019 |
North Florida (2005) | 2 | 2016, 2017 |
Troy (1997)[g] | 2 | 2000, 2004 |
USC Upstate (2007)[h] | 2 | 2012, 2015 |
Arkansas–Little Rock (1980)[i] | 1 | 1986 |
Central Florida (1992)[j] | 1 | 1998† |
Florida Atlantic (1993)[k] | 1 | 2005 |
Gardner–Webb (2002)[l] | 1 | 2008 |
Northeast Louisiana (1978)[m] | 1 | 1979 |
Bellarmine (2020) | 0 | — |
Campbell (1994)[n] | 0 | — |
Central Arkansas (2021) | 0 | — |
Eastern Kentucky (2021) | 0 | — |
Jacksonville (1997) | 0 | — |
Jacksonville State (1995, 2021)[o] | 0 | — |
Kennesaw State (2005) | 0 | — |
NJIT (2015)[p] | 0 | — |
North Alabama (2018) | 0 | — |
Northern Kentucky (2012)[q] | 0 | — |
Oklahoma City (1978)[r] | 0 | — |
Footnotes[]
- ^ Centenary College of Louisiana left in 2000 and went independent. The Gents (and Ladies) have since dropped from Division I, and are now in the Division III Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference.
- ^ The College of Charleston left in 1998 to join the Southern Conference (SoCon), and is now in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA).
- ^ Georgia Southern University left in 1992 to join the SoCon, and is now in the Sun Belt Conference.
- ^ Jump up to: a b East Tennessee State University and Mercer University left in 2014 to join the SoCon.
- ^ Belmont University left in 2012 to join the Ohio Valley Conference.
- ^ Georgia State University left in 2005 to join the CAA, and is now in the Sun Belt.
- ^ Troy University left in 2005 to join the Sun Belt.
- ^ The University of South Carolina Upstate (USC Upstate) left in 2018 to join the Big South Conference.
- ^ The University of Arkansas at Little Rock, now branded athletically as "Little Rock", left in 1991 to join the Sun Belt.
- ^ The University of Central Florida, now athletically branded and academically marketed as UCF, left in 2005 to join Conference USA (C-USA), and is now in the American Athletic Conference.
- ^ Florida Atlantic University left in 2006 to join the Sun Belt, and is now in C-USA.
- ^ Gardner–Webb University left in 2008 to join the Big South Conference.
- ^ The University of Louisiana at Monroe, then known as Northeast Louisiana University, left in 1983 to join the Southland Conference, and is now in the Sun Belt.
- ^ Campbell University left in 2011 to rejoin its pre-1994 home of the Big South Conference.
- ^ Jacksonville State University left in 2003 to join the Ohio Valley Conference and rejoined the ASUN in 2021.
- ^ NJIT left in 2020 to join the America East Conference.
- ^ Northern Kentucky left for the Horizon League in 2015.
- ^ Oklahoma City University was a charter TAAC member in 1978, but was only a member in the first season of 1978–79. The Chiefs, now the Stars, left to become a charter member of the Midwestern City Conference (now the Horizon League). Oklahoma City left the NCAA altogether in 1985, and is now a member of the NAIA Sooner Athletic Conference.
References[]
- "Men's Basketball Record Book". Basketball Media Guide 2009–10 (pg. 39). Atlantic Sun Conference. 2009. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- ^ Banks, Varidel Earn Atlantic Sun All-Conference Honors Archived July 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 1, 2011
- ^ Craig, Belmont Trio Highlight All-Conference Team Archived 2012-02-28 at the Wayback Machine, accessed February 27, 2012
- ^ A-Sun Announces Men's All-Conference Awards Via Video, accessed March 5, 2013
- ^ A-Sun Announces 2014 #ASunMBB All-Conference Awards, accessed March 3, 2014
- ^ Upstate's Ty Greene named A-Sun Player of the Year, accessed March 2, 2015
- ^ "North Florida's Moore Highlights @ASunMBB Postseason Honors" (Press release). Atlantic Sun Conference. February 29, 2016. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
- ^ "Back-to-back honors for Moore; FGCU collects three @ASUNMBB awards" (Press release). Atlantic Sun Conference. February 26, 2017. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
- ^ "FGCU's Goodwin grabs @ASUNMBB top honor; postseason awards announced" (Press release). ASUN Conference. February 25, 2018. Retrieved February 25, 2018.
- ^ "Lipscomb's Mathews highlights 2019 @ASUNMBB postseason awards" (Press release). ASUN Conference. March 4, 2019. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
- ^ "Liberty's Homesley Highlights 2019-20 @ASUN_MBB Postseason Awards" (Press release). ASUN Conference. March 3, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
- ^ "Liberty's McGhee Tabbed Player of the Year; 2020-21 @ASUN_MBB Awards Announced" (Press release). Atlantic Sun Conference. March 3, 2021. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
- Awards established in 1979
- NCAA Division I men's basketball conference players of the year
- ASUN Conference men's basketball