Awarded for | Nation's top mid-major men's player in NCAA Division I basketball |
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Country | United States |
Presented by | Collegeinsider.com |
History | |
First award | 2010 |
Most recent | Trey Townsend, Oakland |
Website | www |
The Lou Henson Award is an award given annually by CollegeInsider.com to the most outstanding mid-major men's college basketball player in NCAA Division I competition. The award, established in 2010, is named for esteemed Illinois Fighting Illini head coach Lou Henson. [1] Henson, who also coached at Hardin–Simmons and New Mexico State, compiled 779 all-time wins. [1] He is in the top 10 of NCAA coaching wins in men's basketball history.
At the same time the Henson Award was established, CollegeInsider.com also created the Lou Henson All-America Team, consisting of the 30 players that its selection committee deems to be the top Division I mid-major players. Unlike most other All-America teams in basketball and other sports, the Henson All-America Team is not divided into different grades (e.g., first team, second team, third team, honorable mention)—all players are treated equally as All-Americans. [1]
Starting with the 2011–12 season, the number of Henson All-Americans was reduced to 25. This coincided with the decision of CollegeInsider.com to establish a Lute Olson All-America Team in conjunction with its Lute Olson Award for the top player who has played at least two years at his current school. The Olson All-America Team also has 25 members; unlike the Olson or Henson Awards, this team is open to all players regardless of their year of attendance or conference affiliation. The number of Henson All-Americans returned to 30 for the 2013–14 season and has remained at that number ever since (with the possibility of additional members should there be a tie in voting). From 2011–12 through 2015–16, players on the Olson All-America team, even if they came from mid-major schools, were not eligible for the Henson Award.
The above policy was modified for 2016–17, although CollegeInsider.com did not publicly announce all details. For the first time since the establishment of the Olson All-America team, members of that team were eligible for selection as Henson All-Americans. In that season, three players from Henson-eligible conferences—Alec Peters of Valparaiso, Justin Robinson of Monmouth, and Nigel Williams-Goss of Gonzaga—were selected to the Olson team. [2] When the Henson team was announced, Peters and Robinson (who ultimately won the Henson Award) were on that team, but Williams-Goss was missing—despite the Henson team including another player from Gonzaga's home of the West Coast Conference (specifically Jock Landale of Saint Mary's). [3] Williams-Goss was a consensus second-team All-American that season.
Definitions of the term "mid-major" in the context of college basketball vary widely. For purposes of both the Henson All-America Team and Henson Award, CollegeInsider.com has established its own definition of the term, which includes members of the following conferences, as well as any basketball independents: [4]
The list of eligible conferences has always excluded all conferences that sponsor FBS football except for the MAC and the Sun Belt. The Atlantic 10 Conference, which has not sponsored football at all since 2006, has also been excluded throughout the award's history. [5] Following major conference realignment that peaked in 2013, the WAC, which dropped football after the 2012 season, was added to the eligible list, while both offshoots of the original Big East Conference—the FBS American Athletic Conference and the current non-football Big East—were excluded from eligibility.
Player (X) | Denotes the number of times the player has been awarded the Lou Henson Award |
Year | Player | School | Position | Class | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009–10 | Keith Benson | Oakland | C | Junior | [6] |
2010–11 | Matt Howard | Butler | PF | Senior | [7] |
2011–12 | Kyle O'Quinn | Norfolk State | PF | Senior | [8] |
2012–13 | Matthew Dellavedova | Saint Mary's | PG | Senior | [9] |
2013–14 | Langston Hall | Mercer | PG | Senior | [10] |
2014–15 | Ty Greene | USC Upstate | PG | Senior | [11] |
2015–16 | Thomas Walkup | Stephen F. Austin | SG | Senior | [12] |
2016–17 | Justin Robinson | Monmouth | PG | Senior | [13] |
2017–18 | Clayton Custer | Loyola (Illinois) | PG | Junior | [14] |
2018–19 | Fletcher Magee | Wofford | SG | Senior | [15] |
2019–20 | Nathan Knight | William & Mary | PF / C | Senior | [16] |
2020–21 | Max Abmas | Oral Roberts | G | Sophomore | [17] |
2021–22 | Malachi Smith | Chattanooga | SG | Junior | [18] |
2022–23 | Jordan Brown | Louisiana | C | Junior | [19] |
2023–24 | Trey Townsend | Oakland | SF | Junior |
School | Winners | Years |
---|---|---|
Oakland | 2 | 2010, 2024 |
Butler | 1 | 2011 |
Chattanooga | 1 | 2022 |
Louisiana | 1 | 2023 |
Loyola (Illinois) | 1 | 2018 |
Mercer | 1 | 2014 |
Monmouth | 1 | 2017 |
Norfolk State | 1 | 2012 |
Oral Roberts | 1 | 2021 |
Saint Mary's | 1 | 2013 |
Stephen F. Austin | 1 | 2016 |
USC Upstate | 1 | 2015 |
William & Mary | 1 | 2020 |
Wofford | 1 | 2019 |
From the 2011–12 season, when the Olson All-America Team was established, through the 2015–16 season, players named to that team were ineligible for the Henson Award, even if they played at eligible schools. The following players were ineligible for the Henson Award due solely to being named to the Olson All-America Team. Individuals in bold were consensus first- or second-team All-Americans in the same season.
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