Purdue's Zach Edey Wins 2023 John R. Wooden Award Presented By Wendy's Men's Player of the Year



Purdue's Zach Edey Wins 2023 John R. Wooden Award Presented By Wendy's Men's Player of the Year

LOS ANGELES, Calif. (April 4, 2023) – The Los Angeles Athletic Club announced that Zach Edey of Purdue University is the winner of the 2023 John R. Wooden Award presented by Wendy’s as the most outstanding player in men’s college basketball. The announcement was made during ESPN SportsCenter.

Edey, born in Toronto, Ontario, is the first Canadian born winner.  He is also the second winner from Purdue University (Glenn Robinson, 1994).  Edey is the first player since Wooden Award winner David Robinson (1987) to have at least 750 points, 450 rebounds and 50 blocks in a single season.

Voting took place from March 13-20, 2023, by a national collection of voters who cover the sport and former winners.  As insisted upon by Coach Wooden at the Award’s creation in 1975, all players considered for the ballot were certified by their universities as meeting or exceeding the academic criteria of the John R. Wooden Award.

Zach joins Coach Dawn Staley, the Wooden Award Legend of Coaching recipient, and Caitlin Clark, the Wooden Award honoree for women’s basketball, as the celebrated winners of the nation’s most prestigious collegiate basketball awards.  They will be joined by their coaches and the Wooden Award All American team at the trophy presentation on Friday, April 7, 2023 at the Los Angeles Athletic Club.

 

About the John R. Wooden Award

Created in 1976, the John R. Wooden Award Program hosts the most prestigious honors in college
basketball recognizing The Wooden Award Most Outstanding Player for men and women, The Wooden Award All America Teams for men and women and the annual selection of the Wooden Award Legend of Coaching recipient. Honorees have proven to their university that they meet or exceed the qualifications of the John R. Wooden Award as set forth by Coach Wooden and the Wooden Award Steering Committee, including making progress towards graduation and maintaining at least a 2.0 cumulative GPA. Previous winners include Larry Bird (’79), Michael Jordan (’84), Tim Duncan (’97), Kevin Durant (’07), Candace Parker (’07; ’08), Maya Moore (’09; ’11), Chiney Ogwumike (’14), and last year’s recipients, Aliyah Boston of South Carolina and Oscar Tshiebwe of Kentucky.

Since its inception, the John R. Wooden Award has contributed nearly one million dollars to the universities’ general scholarship fund in the names of the Wooden Award All American recipients and has sent more than 1,000 underprivileged children to week-long college basketball camps. Additionally, the John R. Wooden Award partners with the Special Olympics Southern California (SOSC) each year to host the Wooden Award Special Olympics Southern California Basketball Tournament. The day-long tournament brings together Special Olympics athletes and Wooden Award All Americans and coaches in attendance. It is hosted at the Los Angeles Athletic Club during the John R. Wooden Award Weekend.

The Legends of Coaching Award will be presented to Coach Dawn Staley, the 2023 recipient, along with the Wooden Award Men’s and Women’s Players of the Year on April 7, 2023. For up-to-date information on the Wooden Award, please go to www.woodenaward.com and follow the Wooden Award on Facebook at www.facebook.com/woodenaward and @WoodenAward on Twitter and Instagram.

 

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John R. Wooden Award

Presented by Wendy’s

Men’s Player of the Year

Year

Player

School

2023

Zach Edey

Purdue

2022

Oscar Tshiebwe

Kentucky

2021

Luka Garza

Iowa

2020

Obi Toppin

Dayton

2019

Zion Williamson

Duke

2018

Jalen Brunson

Villanova

2017

Frank Mason III

Kansas

2016

Buddy Hield

Oklahoma

2015

Frank Kaminsky

Wisconsin

2014

Doug McDermott

Creighton

2013

Trey Burke

Michigan

2012

Anthony Davis

Kentucky

2011

Jimmer Fredette

BYU

2010

Evan Turner

Ohio State

2009

Blake Griffin

Oklahoma

2008

Tyler Hansbrough

North Carolina

2007

Kevin Durant

Texas

2006

J.J. Redick

Duke

2005

Andrew Bogut

Utah

2004

Jameer Nelson

St. Joseph’s

2003

T.J. Ford

Texas

2002

Jason Williams

Duke

2001

Shane Battier

Duke

2000

Kenyon Martin

Cincinnati

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

UNLV

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

BYU

1980

Darrell Griffith

Louisville

1979

Larry Bird

Indiana State

1978

Phil Ford

North Carolina

1977

Marques Johnson

UCLA


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    published this page in News & Media 2023-04-04 15:42:21 -0700

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