The Macomb Daily

Kentucky’s Tshiebwe named AP men’s college player of year

- By Aaron Beard

Kentucky’s Oscar Tshiebwe spent an entire season relentless­ly chasing and pulling down seemingly every rebound that came his way — and plenty that didn’t, too.

“I want to be the greatest rebounder I can be,” Tshiebwe said.

The 6-foot-9, 255-pound junior put up better rebounding numbers than anybody in Division I in decades. And it’s a big reason why he is The Associated Press men’s college basketball national player of the year.

Tshiebwe was the clear choice for the award announced Friday, receiving 46 of 60 votes from AP Top 25 voters. Johnny Davis, a 6-5 sophomore who averaged 19.7 points and led Wisconsin to a share of the Big Ten regular-season title, was second with 10 votes. Iowa sophomore Keegan Murray (three) and Illinois big man Kofi Cockburn (one) also earned votes.

Tshiebwe, a West Virginia transfer and native of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is only the second player in the history of the storied history of the Wildcats program to win the AP’s top honor. The other was one-and-done star Anthony Davis, who led Kentucky to its eighth NCAA title a decade ago before becoming the No. 1 NBA draft pick.

“It is amazing to be join somebody like Anthony Davis,” Tshiebwe said. “And that gives me confidence and gives me more help for my future, too, for what I’m trying to do and what I’m trying to accomplish. I’m just putting God first because God knows what I need, and he has great plans for me.”

Tshiebwe thrived all season while averaging 15.1 rebounds, the highest per-game output in Division I since 1980. He had five games of at least 20 rebounds this season and three games with at least 10 boards on the offensive glass alone.

The highlight came when he had a Division I high of 28 rebounds in a December win against Western Kentucky.

He also worked to expand his offensive game, adding range on a developing jumpshot to go with his relentless board work. Tshiebwe averaged 17.4 points and shot 60.6% from the floor, a big step forward from his freshman season when he averaged 11.2 points and 9.3 rebounds with the Mountainee­rs before transferri­ng after 10 games.

Tshiebwe said the rebounding success is a product of studying his opponents closely, playing the odds on where the ball is headed and the determinat­ion not to “let anybody move you.”

“First of all, it’s the position,” he said. “You have to place yourself where you don’t need to work too hard for the basketball just to come in your hands. You’ve got to read it . ... If somebody’s shooting this angle, probably 75% it’s going that way because the ball’s coming in this way, 25% it’s coming this way. You have to know that.”

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kentucky forward Oscar Tshiebwe (34) celebrates during the second half of the team’s game against Vanderbilt in the Southeaste­rn Conference in Tampa, Fla.
CHRIS O’MEARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kentucky forward Oscar Tshiebwe (34) celebrates during the second half of the team’s game against Vanderbilt in the Southeaste­rn Conference in Tampa, Fla.

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