Cincinnati’s Martin Honored
Kenyon Martin, who carried Cincinnati to a No. 1 ranking for much of the college basketball season, couldn’t even carry the John R. Wooden Award he received for his efforts.
Martin, named the player of the year after averaging 18.9 points, 9.7 rebounds and 3.4 blocked shots this season, needed crutches to walk to the podium at the Los Angeles Athletic Club.
He broke a bone in his right leg in a game against St. Louis in the first round of the Conference USA tournament.
That ended his senior season and cost the Bearcats a likely No. 1 seeding in the NCAA tournament. The Bearcats were seeded second in the South region and lost to Tulsa in the second round.
Martin was selected in a poll of 1,047 sportswriters and broadcasters.
The other finalists were Iowa State forward Marcus Fizer, Michigan State guard Mateen Cleaves, Indiana guard A.J. Guyton and Duke forward Shane Battier.
In the top 10 and on the Wooden All-American team were Duke forward Chris Carrawell, Stanford forward Mark Madsen, Texas center Chris Mihm, Notre Dame forward Troy Murphy and Michigan State forward Morris Peterson.
“It’s a great honor to be on a list with all of the players on the list,” Martin said. “For them to pick me, it’s an honor.”
Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski received the Legends of Coaching Award.
Martin is a strong candidate to become the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft. The Clippers are strong candidates to win the draft lottery and select first.
Last year’s Wooden Award winner, Elton Brand of Duke, was taken with the first draft pick by the Chicago Bulls.
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Wooden Award
1999
Elton Brand, Duke
1998
Antawn Jamison, North Carolina
1997
Tim Duncan, Wake Forest
1996
Marcus Camby, Massachusetts
1995
Ed O’Bannon, UCLA
1994
Glenn Robinson, Purdue
1993
Calbert Cheaney, Indiana
1992
Christian Laettner, Duke
1991
Larry Johnson, Nevada Las Vegas
1990
Lionel Simmons, La Salle
1989
Sean Elliott, Arizona
1988
Danny Manning, Kansas
1987
David Robinson, Navy
1986
Walter Berry, St. John’s
1985
Chris Mullin, St. John’s
1984
Michael Jordan, North Carolina
1983
Ralph Sampson, Virginia
1982
Ralph Sampson, Virginia
1981
Danny Ainge, Brigham Young
1980
Darryl Griffith, Louisville
1979
Larry Bird, Indiana State
1978
Phil Ford, North Carolina
1977
Marques Johnson, UCLA
2000 VOTING
1. Kenyon Martin, Cincinnati
4,365 points
2. Marcus Fizer, Iowa State
2,993
3. Mateen Cleaves, Michigan State
2,296
4. Shane Battier, Duke
1,990
5. A.J. Guyton, Indiana
1,831
6. Troy Murphy, Notre Dame
1,446
7. Chris Carrawell, Duke
1,407
8. Morris Peterson, Michigan State
1,274
9. Chris Mihm, Texas
1,160
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