Each year, USA Today, an American newspaper, awards outstanding high school basketball players with a place on its male and female All-USA high school basketball teams. The newspaper names athletes whom it believes to be the best basketball players from high schools around the United States. In addition, one member of each team is named, respectively, the male or female USA Today High School Basketball Player of the Year. The newspaper names two teams, one for male athletes and one for female athletes. The newspaper has named a team every year since 1983. Each year, the newspaper also selects a USA Today High School Boys' Basketball Coach of the Year and a USA Today High School Girls' Basketball Coach of the Year.
Video USA Today All-USA high school basketball team
Boys' basketball players and coaches of the year
- See footnotes
Boys' Basketball Coach of the Year
Maps USA Today All-USA high school basketball team
Girls' Basketball Players and Coaches of the Year
- See footnotes
Girls' Basketball Coach of the Year
Teams
- Notes
- Bold denotes Boys' Players of the Year, respectively, and ? denotes high school juniors.
- The "Hometown" column should contain the player's actual hometown, which is not always the location of the player's high school.
1983 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Bob Wade (Dunbar High School, Baltimore)
- First Team
1984 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Morgan Wooten (DeMatha Catholic High School, Hyattsville, Maryland)
- First Team
1985 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: John Wood (Spingarn High School, Washington, D.C.)
- First Team
1986 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Stu Vetter (Flint Hill Prep, Oakton, Virginia)
- First Team
1987 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Stu Vetter (Flint Hill Prep, Oakton, Virginia)
- First Team
1988 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: John Sarandrea (St. Nicholas of Tolentine, Bronx, New York)
- First Team
- Chris Jackson changed his name to Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf in 1993, two years after his conversion to Islam.
1989 Boys' team
1st team: Kenny Anderson, Doug Edwards, Allan Houston, Bobby Hurley, Jim Jackson David Johnson
1990 Boys' team
1st team: Damon Bailey, Shawn Bradley, Jamie Brandon, Eric Montross, Ed O'Bannon
1991 Boys' team
1st team: Alan Henderson, Juwan Howard, Glenn Robinson, David Vaughn, Chris Webber
1992 Boys' team
1st team: Donta Bright, Othella Harrington, Jason Kidd, Jamya Jones, Corliss Williamson, Bryan Adams,
1993 Boys' team
1st team: Randy Livingston, Jerry Stackhouse, Jacque Vaughn, Rasheed Wallace, Dontonio Wingfield Ross Miller Randolph High School San Antonio, Texas. 6'7 215lbs USA Today All-State Texas Player of the Year. Averaged 21.3 points per game. 11.3 rebounds per game. 6.8 blocks per game. Led team to Texas state semifinals and 22-6 record. San Jose Mercury News Staff Writer John Akers Writer Ross Miller, the Texas basketball player of the year according to USA Today, has signed with San Jose State and is on campus,eligible to play this season. Miller, 6-foot-8 forward, led Randolph High of Universal City, Texas, last season with 21.3 points, 11.8 rebounds and 6.8 blocks per game. He was an all-state player among Texas' Division 2A. "Something good really happened to us", Coach Stan Morrison said. Miller fell through the recruiting cracks, according to SJS assistant coach Stan Stewart, because of injuries during his junior and senior seasons. He underwent ankle surgery after his junior season, preventing summer camps, and injured cartilage in a knee last season during the semifinal game of the Texas state tournament. Miller didn't play in the championship game, leading some college scouts to believe the injury was serious. The knee required only arthroscopic surgery, but by then most schools had committed all their scholarships. NCAA rules have reduced scholarship limits from 15 to 13 for all its nearly 300 Division I schools. SJS had two scholarships available because freshman recruits Darrnaryl Stamps and Terence Wilborn failed to meet minimum NCAA academic requirements. Pete Miller, Ross' uncle, was a guard at SJS during the 1973-74 and 74-75 seasons.
1994 Boys' team
1st team: Jelani Gardner, Raef LaFrentz, Felipe López, Ricky Price, Michael Edmonson
1995 Boys' team
1st team: Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Vince Carter, Kevin Garnett, Stephon Marbury, Ron Mercer
1996 Boys' team
1st team: Mike Bibby, Kobe Bryant, Ronnie Fields, Winfred Walton, Tim Thomas
1997 Boys' team
1st team: Chris Burgess, Baron Davis, Mark Karcher, Tracy McGrady, Lamar Odom
1998 Boys' team
1st team: Al Harrington, Rashard Lewis, Quentin Richardson, Stromile Swift, Markiese Merceir
1999 Boys' team
1st team: LaVell Blanchard, Donnell Harvey, Jay Williams, Joseph Forte, DerMarr Johnson.
2nd team: Keith Bogans, Jason Kapono, Brett Nelson, Jason Richardson, Leon Smith
3rd team: Carlos Boozer, Casey Jacobsen, Casey Sanders, Kenny Satterfield, Damien Wilkins
2000 Boys' team
1st team: Eddie Griffin, Darius Miles, Zach Randolph, Marcus Taylor, Gerald Wallace
2001 Boys' team
1st team: Kwame Brown, Eddy Curry, LeBron James, Kelvin Torbert, Dajuan Wagner
2002 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Leonard Bishop (Lincoln High School, Dallas)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2003 Boys' team
- 1st team
- LeBron James, Brian Butch, Kevin Richardson, Ndudi Ebi, Mustafa Shakur
- Coach of the Year
- Dru Joyce II
2004 Boys' team
- 1st team
- Dwight Howard, Sebastian Telfair, Josh Smith, Shaun Livingston, Al Jefferson
- Coach of the Year
- Steve Smith
2005 Boys' team
- 1st team
- Greg Oden, O. J. Mayo, Monta Ellis, Louis Williams, Josh McRoberts
- Coach of the Year
- Dan Bazzani
2006 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Jack Keefer (Lawrence North High School, Indianapolis)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2007 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Kevin Boyle (St. Patrick High School, Elizabeth, New Jersey)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2008 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Bob Hurley (St. Anthony High School, Jersey City, New Jersey)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
- Jennings did not attend any college, as he chose to sign a professional contract with Lottomatica Roma of the Italian Serie A after finishing high school. He was eligible to enter the NBA Draft one year after graduating from high school, and was selected with the 10th overall pick of the 2009 NBA draft by the Bucks.
- Dunigan signed a 3-year contract with Hapoel Migdal of the Israeli Basketball Super League shortly before the start of the 2010-11 college season. Currently, Dunigan is on BC Kalev/Cramo basketball team in the Estonian Estonian Korvapalli Meistriliiga League (also known as EMKL). He was eligible to enter the 2011 NBA draft, but went undrafted.
2009 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: J.R. Holmes (Bloomington South High School, Bloomington, Indiana)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2010 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Vance Downs (Ames High School, Ames, Iowa)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2011 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Bob Hurley (St. Anthony High School, Jersey City, New Jersey)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
2012 Boys' team
Coach of the Year: Steve Smith (Oak Hill Academy, Mouth of Wilson, Virginia)
- First Team
- Second Team
- Third Team
- Austin ended his college basketball career in 2014 after being diagnosed with Marfan syndrome. After receiving medical clearance to return to play in late 2016, he began playing professionally overseas in 2017.
2013 Boys' team
Coach of the year: Kevin Boyle, Montverde (Florida) Academy
- First team
- Second team
- Third team
2014 Boys' team
Coach of the year: Sharman White, Miller Grove, Lithonia, Ga.
- First team
- Mudiay chose to sign with the Guangdong Southern Tigers of the Chinese Basketball Association instead of accepting a scholarship offer from SMU. He was drafted after one season in China.
- Second team
- Third team
2015 Boys' team
Coach of the year: Melvin Randall, Blanche Ely, Pompano Beach, Florida
- First team
- Second team
- Third team
2016 Boys' team
Coach of the year: Steve Baik, Chino Hills, California
- First team
- Second team
- Third team
2017 Boys' team
Coach of the year: Jack Doss, Mae Jemison, Huntsville, Alabama
- First team
- Second team
- Bowen signed to play with Louisville, but was suspended before what would have been his freshman season because of an FBI investigation that raised serious questions about his NCAA eligibility, and never played for the school. He enrolled at South Carolina in January 2018, and the school is currently attempting to resolve potential NCAA eligibility issues.
- Third team
See also
- List of U.S. high school basketball national player of the year awards
- USA Today All-USA High School Baseball Team (including Player and Coach of the Year)
- USA Today All-USA High School Football Team
- National High School Hall of Fame
References
First team picks, 1983-2001
External links
- USA Today Index Page
Source of the article : Wikipedia