List of NCAA Division I men's basketball season assists leaders

Last updated

In basketball, an assist is a pass to a teammate that directly leads to a score by field goal. [1] The National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) Division I assist title is awarded to the player with the highest assists per game average in a given season. The assist title was first recognized in the 1950–51 season when statistics on assists were first compiled by the NCAA, but there are no officially recorded assist leaders between 1952–53 and 1982–83. The NCAA did not split into its current divisions format until August 1973. [2] From 1906 to 1955, there were no classifications to the NCAA nor its predecessor, the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS). [2] Then, from 1956 to 1973, colleges were classified as either "NCAA University Division (Major College)" or "NCAA College Division (Small College)". [2]

Contents

Avery Johnson of Southern University holds the all-time NCAA Division I record for single season assists per game (apg) average (13.30), which he accomplished in 1987–88. [3] He also recorded 399 assists that season, which is the second highest single season mark behind UNLV's Mark Wade's record of 406, which occurred in 1986–87. [4] From 1952–53 to 1982–83, the official NCAA record book has no assists per game leaders. [4] Oklahoma freshman Trae Young was the first player to lead the NCAA in both assists and points in the 2017–18 season, while Murray State sophomore Ja Morant was the first player in NCAA history to average at least 20 points and 10 assists throughout the same season in the 2018–19 season.

Four players have earned multiple assist titles: Avery Johnson of Southern (1987, 1988), Jared Jordan of Marist (2006, 2007), Jason Brickman of LIU Brooklyn (2013, 2014), and Yuri Collins of Saint Louis. [5] [6] There has been one tie for the national assists leader, which happened during the 2004–05 season when Damitrius Coleman of Mercer and Will Funn of Portland State recorded identical season statistics: 28 games played, 224 total assists and an 8.00 apg average. [7]

Only three freshmen (T. J. Ford, Lonzo Ball, and Trae Young) and two sophomores (Jason Kidd and Ja Morant) have led Division I in average assists. [4] [8] [9] Two players born outside the United States have led Division I in assists — 1995–96 leader Raimonds Miglinieks of UC Irvine, born in modern-day Latvia (the Latvian SSR of the Soviet Union at the time of his birth), and 1999–2000 leader Mark Dickel of UNLV, born in New Zealand.

Key

Assists leaders

Jason Kidd won the assists title in 1993-94. KiddFTline.jpg
Jason Kidd won the assists title in 1993–94.
T. J. Ford was the first freshman to lead NCAA Division I in assists. Tj ford zzz cropped.jpg
T. J. Ford was the first freshman to lead NCAA Division I in assists.
Lonzo Ball became the second freshman to do so, in 2016-17. 20160330 MCDAAG Lonzo Ball handle.jpg
Lonzo Ball became the second freshman to do so, in 2016–17.
Trae Young was the third freshman to lead in assists and the first player to lead in both points and assists in 2017-18. 20170329 MCDAAG Trae Young dribbling.jpg
Trae Young was the third freshman to lead in assists and the first player to lead in both points and assists in 2017–18.

Except as specifically noted, all teams are listed with their current athletic brand names, which do not always reflect those used by a given program in a specific season.

SeasonPlayerPos.Cl.TeamGames
played
Assists APGRef.
1950–51 Bill Walker GSr Toledo 292107.24 [4]
1951–52 Tom O'Toole GSr Boston College 272137.89 [4]
195383 No assists leaders recorded
1983–84 Craig Lathen GJr UIC 292749.45 [10]
1984–85 Robbie Weingard GSr Hofstra 242289.50 [11]
1985–86 Mark Jackson GJr St. John's 363289.11 [12]
1986–87 Avery Johnson GJr Southern 3133310.74 [5]
1987–88 Avery Johnson (2)GSr Southern 3039913.30 [5]
1988–89 Glenn Williams GSr Holy Cross 282789.93 [11]
1989–90 Todd Lehmann GSr Drexel 282609.29 [13]
1990–91 Chris Corchiani GSr NC State 312999.65 [14]
1991–92 Van Usher GSr Tennessee Tech 292548.76 [11]
1992–93 Sam Crawford GSr New Mexico State 343109.12 [15]
1993–94 Jason Kidd *GSo California 302729.07 [8]
1994–95 Nelson Haggerty GSr Baylor 2828410.14 [16]
1995–96 Raimonds Miglinieks GSr UC Irvine 272308.52 [11]
1996–97 Kenneth Mitchell GSr Dartmouth 262037.81 [17]
1997–98 Ahlon Lewis GSr Arizona State 322949.19 [18]
1998–99 Doug Gottlieb GJr Oklahoma State 342998.79 [19]
1999–00 Mark Dickel GSr UNLV 312809.03 [20]
2000–01 Markus Carr GJr Cal State Northridge 322868.94 [21]
2001–02 T. J. Ford GFr Texas 332738.27 [9]
2002–03 Martell Bailey GJr UIC 302448.13 [22]
2003–04 Greg Davis GSr Troy 312568.26 [23]
2004–05 Damitrius Coleman GJr Mercer 282248.00 [7]
Will Funn GSr Portland State 282248.00 [7]
2005–06 Jared Jordan GJr Marist 292478.52 [6]
2006–07 Jared Jordan (2)GSr Marist 332868.67 [6]
2007–08 Jason Richards GSr Davidson 362938.14 [24]
2008–09 Johnathon Jones GJr Oakland 362908.06 [25]
2009–10 Ronald Moore GSr Siena 342617.68 [26]
2010–11 Aaron Johnson GSr UAB 312397.71 [27]
2011–12 Scott Machado GSr Iona 333279.91 [28]
2012–13 Jason Brickman GJr LIU Brooklyn [lower-alpha 1] 342898.50 [29]
2013–14 Jason Brickman (2)GSr LIU Brooklyn [lower-alpha 1] 292899.97 [30]
2014–15 Jalan West GJr Northwestern State 322467.69 [31]
2015–16 Kay Felder GJr Oakland 353249.26 [32]
2016–17 Lonzo Ball GFr UCLA 362747.61 [33]
2017–18 Trae Young GFr Oklahoma 322798.71 [34]
2018–19 Ja Morant GSo Murray State 3333110.03 [35]
2019–20 Kameron Langley GJr North Carolina A&T 312477.96 [36]
2020–21 Jalen Moore GJr Oakland 302528.40 [37]
2021–22 Yuri Collins GJr Saint Louis 342677.85 [38]
2022–23 Yuri Collins (2)GSr Saint Louis 3232410.12 [38]
2023–24 Tyler Kolek GSr Marquette 312397.71 [39]
  1. 1 2 At the time, Long Island University operated two separate athletic programs—the Division I LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds, representing the school's Brooklyn campus, and the Division II LIU Post Pioneers, representing the Post campus in Nassau County, New York. After the 2018–19 school year, the university merged its athletic programs, creating the current LIU Sharks. The Sharks inherited LIU Brooklyn's Division I and Northeast Conference memberships, as well as the history and records of all sports that the Brooklyn campus sponsored at the time of the merger.

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