Morrison and Redick "Duke" it out for Naismith Trophy
With less than a month to go before March Madness, there are
still many questions to be answered regarding almost every
aspect of this year's college basketball season. One question
where the answer appears to be a little bit more clear pertains
to the two most prestigious "Player of the Year" awards, the
Naismith Trophy and the Wooden Award, where Gonzaga junior
forward Adam Morrison and Duke shooting guard JJ Redick have
clearly seperated themselves from the rest of the field.
The Naismith Trophy, won in it's innaugural season by Kareem
Abdul Jabbar in 1969, is presented by Cingular Wireless and is
chosen from a list of candidates nominated by the Atlanta Tipoff
Club. The ATC's Board of Selectors is comprised of leading
journalists, coaches and administrators from around the country.
ATC selects 50 players as pre-season candidates and that number
was recently culled to 30 finalists. Fans can participate in the
selection process by text messaging votes which will comprise as
25 percent of the voting.
The Wooden Award was founded in 1976 in honor of legendary UCLA
Bruin coach, John Wooden. UCLA's Marques Johnson was the first
of 29 winners that have included Larry Bird, Michael Jordan,
David Robinson, and Tim Duncan. The process is similar to the
Naismith where a National Committe picks a 50 man pre-season
All-American team which is reduced to 30 and includes new
additions at mid-season. Three of the last seven winners have
come from Duke so it would appear that Redick has a leg up here.
A 6-8 205 pounder from Spokane, Morrison quickly developed into
one of the West Coast Conference's leading players by averaging
19.1 points per game and grabing 5.5 rebounds per outing. His
long range shooting and distinct Beatles haircut brought the
charismatic sophomore to national attention in the Zag's second
round loss in last year's NCAA tournament.
This year, Morrison got off quickly scoring a career high 43 in
Gonzaga's now classic overtime victory over Michigan State in
Hawaii. Morrison equaled his 43 point outburst in a five point
loss to rival Washington and has hit the 40 mark on two other
occasions. Morrison is averaging 28.8 ppg, 5.5 rpg, and 1.8
assist through February 15th. Morrison often "wills" Gonzaga out
of dire predicaments as he did last Saturday as the Zags came
from seven down in the final five minutes to down Stanford.
JJ Redick is a rare four-year starter at Duke and is averaging
28.9 ppg, 2.2 rpg, and 2.8 apg. The 6-4 sharpshooter from
Roanoke, Virginia recently broke the NCAA record for career
3-pointers (653 at this writing) and has legendary shooting
range. As a sophomore, Redick led the NCAA's in free-throe
percentage at .953 and is a career .923 performer from the
charity stripe.
A sometimes streaky but pure shooter, Redick is noted for his
near perfect shooting machanics. Redick has hit the 40 mark on
three occasions including a season high 41 in the Blue Devils
97-66 route over then number one Texas and then duplicated that
production in Duke's lone loss at Georgetown.
Both players have excellent supporting casts which will make
things all the more interesting come voting time. Besides
Morrison, Gonzaga has 6-10 Brazilian C/PF JP Battista who
averages 20.0 ppg and 9.1 boards per game. 6-3 Derek Raivio
quarterbacks the Zags from the point averaging 11.0 ppg and also
leads the country in foul shooting at .922 percent.
Redick has big man and sure-fire first round pick Sheldon
Williams (18.9 ppg, 9.8 rpg) in the paint doing the dirty work
while all-purpose senior Sean Dockery (9.0 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 3.3
apg) joins Redick in the back court.
Other players having nice years that will garner token
consideration in the balloting for each award are Illinois point
guard Dee Brown (14.3 ppg , 3.1 rpg, 5.6 apg), senior Villanova
shooting guard Randy Foye (20.0 ppg, 5.0 rpg, 3.1 apg) and
UConn's Mr. Everything Rudy Gay (16.1 ppg, 6.7 rpg), but when
it's all said and done, it'll be Morrison or Redick taking home
the hardware.