March 12, 2002
By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Writer
Jason Williams was a unanimous selection to the AP All-America team
Tuesday,
the second year in a row the junior guard was picked for the first team.
Joining Williams on the first team were junior forward Drew Gooden of
Kansas
and senior guards Steve Logan of Cincinnati, Juan Dixon of Maryland and
Dan
Dickau of Gonzaga.
The 6-foot-2 Williams is the first unanimous All-American since Duke's
Elton
Brand in 1999 and the 45th player to repeat. The last was Troy Murphy of
Notre Damem, who did it last season.
Williams was picked on the first team by all 72 voters on the national
media
panel and had 360 points in the 5-3-1 voting.
Each of the past two seasons, one player missed being a unanimous choice
by
one vote - Shane Battier of Duke last season and Kenyon Martin of
Cincinnati
in 2000.
Gooden received 70 first-place votes and 356 points, while Logan had 313
points, Dixon 301 and Dickau 248.
Williams averaged 21.7 points and 5.4 assists and was the floor leader for
the Blue Devils, who were No. 1 in the AP poll for all but four weeks this
season.
"I am not big on ranking players," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "I'll
just say he's certainly of the caliber of any kid that I've coached, and
he
has helped us win a national championship."
The top-ranked Blue Devils begin defense of their national title on
Thursday.
Williams turned to teammates Mike Dunleavy, a second-team selection, and
Carlos Boozer, who was voted to the third team, when told of his
selection.
"It is an honor to be selected AP All-American for the second straight
year
and special to be a unanimous pick as well," he said. "Honestly, I am as
happy for Mike and Carlos, who are great teammates and should be
recognized
for their outstanding seasons."
Williams, who was chosen Tuesday as an alternate for the U.S. team in this
summer's World Championships, was the only member of the preseason
All-America team to be picked for the postseason honor as well. Williams
has
already said this will be his last season at Duke.
Gooden averaged 20.4 points and 11.3 rebounds, while shooting 51 percent
from the field in leading the Jayhawks to the first unbeaten season in the
Big 12 and the No. 1 ranking the weeks Duke wasn't there. He was two votes
shy of joining Williams as a unanimous pick.
"I'm really proud to receive such a prestigious honor," Gooden said. "At
the
start of the season, I had a number of individual goals, which I knew I
could achieve if our team had great success - and so far we have."
Gooden, who has yet to say whether he will return to Kansas next season,
is
the Jayhawks' first All-America since Raef LaFrentz and Paul Pierce made
the
1998 team.
Logan, the two-time Conference USA player of the year, averaged 22 points
and 5.2 assists, and established himself as one of the country's clutch
players over his career with a number of big end-of-game shots.
"It is very gratifying to see how a guy who goes out and works as hard as
Steve does, day-in, day-out, can accomplish what he has accomplished
during
his career here," Bearcats coach Bob Huggins said. "It is all because of
his
excellent work ethic, which has been so infectious to the others on this
year's team."
Martin was the last Cincinnati player to earn All-America honors.
Dixon, the Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year, led Maryland to
its
first Final Four appearance last season and to its first No. 1 seeding
this
year. He averaged 19.3 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.7 steals for the
Terrapins.
"It's a great feeling, especially when your team is winning. It's
something
I can share with everybody," he said.
The last Maryland player to be chosen as an All-American was Joe Smith in
1995.
Dickau is Gonzaga's first All-American, coming after a season in which the
Bulldogs crack the Top Ten for the first time. They finished sixth.
A transfer from Washington, Dickau averaged 20.6 points and 4.9 assists,
while shooting 47.7 percent from 3-point range this season and was chosen
West Coast Conference player of the year.
"I can't imagine it," Dickau said when told of his selection. "Obviously
it's the biggest compliment in college basketball. You dream about it and
set goals, not knowing if those goals will be reached. But most of all,
it's
great for this program."
Dunleavy led the second team with 193 points and was joined by Casey
Jacobsen of Stanford, Sam Clancy of Southern California, David West of
Xavier and Jared Jeffries of Indiana.
Boozer led the third team and was joined by Brandin Knight of Pittsburgh,
Jason Gardner of Arizona, Tayshaun Prince of Kentucky and Erwin Dudley of
Alabama.
Jacobsen was a first-team selection last season. The last player to fall
from first team one season to second the next was Mateen Cleaves of
Michigan
State, who was a second team in 2000 when the Spartans won the national
championship.
The other members of the preseason All-America team were Kareem Rush of
Missouri, Prince, Jacobsen and Frank Williams of Illinois.
2001-02 All-America Basketball Team
By The Associated Press
FIRST TEAM
Jason Williams, Duke, 6-2, 195, junior, 21.7 ppg, 5.4 apg, 2.1 steals (72 first-place votes, 360 total points).
Drew Gooden, Kansas, 6-10, 230, junior, 20.4 ppg, 11.3 rpg, .510 fg pct. (70, 356).
Steve Logan, Cincinnati, 6-1, 198, senior, 22.0 ppg, 5.2 apg, .869 ft pct. (52, 313).
Juan Dixon, Maryland, 6-3, 164, senior, 19.3 ppg, 4.8 rpg, .903 ft pct., 2.7 steals (48, 301).
Dan Dickau, Gonzaga, 6-1, 189, senior, 20.6 ppg, 4.9 apg, .477 3-pt fg pct., .881 ft pct. (29, 248).
SECOND TEAM
Mike Dunleavy, Duke, 6-9, 220, junior, 17.4 ppg, 7.2 rpg, 2.3 steals (21, 193).
Sam Clancy, Southern Cal, 6-7, 240, senior, 19.0 ppg, 9.5 rpg (12, 151).
Casey Jacobsen, Stanford, 6-6, 210, junior, 22.0 ppg, 4.4 rpg, 3.6 apg (11, 151).
David West, Xavier, 6-8, 232, junior, 18.5 ppg, 9.8 rpg, 2.5 blocks, .541 fg pct. (7, 113).
Jared Jeffries, Indiana, 6-10, 215, sophomore, 15.2 ppg, 7.5 rpg (7, 112).
THIRD TEAM
Carlos Boozer, Duke, 6-9, 280, junior, 18.3 ppg, 8.8 rpg, .667 fg pct. (7, 95).
Brandin Knight, Pittsburgh, 6-0, 175, junior, 15.6 ppg, 4.9 rpg, 7.2 apg, 2.4 steals (4, 83).
Jason Gardner, Arizona, 5-10, 181, junior, 20.5 ppg, 4.5 apg, 1.9 steals, 38.1 minutes (0, 67).
Tayshaun Prince, Kentucky, 6-9, 215, senior, 16.9 ppg, 6.3 rpg (4, 66).
Erwin Dudley, Alabama, 6-8, 240, junior, 15.3 ppg, 8.9 rpg, .561 fg pct. (1, 64).
HONORABLE MENTION
Tommy Adams, Hampton, Lubos Barton, Valparaiso, Lonny Baxter, Maryland, Troy Bell, Boston College, Steve Blake, Maryland.
Brett Blizzard, N.C.-Wilmington, Matt Bonner, Florida, Curtis Borchardt, Stanford, Caron Butler, Connecticut, Nick Collison, Kansas.
Jason Conley, VMI, Josh Davis, Wyoming, Patrick Doctor, American, Henry Domercant, Eastern Illinois, Corsley Edwards, Central Connecticut State.
Melvin Ely, Fresno State, Jason Erickson, Montana State, Reggie Evans, Iowa, T.J. Ford, Texas, Jerry Green, UC Irvine.
Lynn Greer, Temple, Rod Grizzard, Alabama, Anthony Grundy, North Carolina State, Rylan Hainje, Butler, Udonis Haslem, Florida.
Jarvis Hayes, Georgia, Paul Haynes, Grambling State, Kirk Hinrich, Kansas, Frederick Jones, Oregon, Jason Kapono, UCLA.
Kyle Korver, Creighton, Greg Lewis, Winthrop, John Linehan, Providence, Chris Marcus, Western Kentucky, Keith McLeod, Bowling Green.
Ugonna Onyekwe, Pennsylvania, Mario Porter, Rider, McEverett Powers, Texas-San Antonio, Hollis Price, Oklahoma, Luke Recker, Iowa.
Luke Ridenour, Oregon, Hector Romero, New Orleans, Kareem Rush, Missouri, Predrag Savovic, Hawaii, Preston Shumpert, Syracuse.
Darius Songaila, Wake Forest, T.J. Sorrentine, Vermont, Thomas Terrell, Georgia State, Dwyane Wade, Marquette, Dajuan Wagner, Memphis, Luke Walton, Arizona, Frank Williams, Illinois.