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Oscar Tshiebwe Named Consensus All-America First Team

Oscar Tshiebwe became an NCAA Consensus First-Team All-America selection on Thursday when he added his fourth major honor as a first-team pick by the United States Basketball Writers Association.

Kentucky junior forward became an NCAA Consensus First-Team All-America selection on Thursday when he added his fourth major honor as a first-team pick by the United States Basketball Writers Association.

Tshiebwe is the first Wildcat to earn consensus All-America first-team distinction since Tyler Ulis in 2016. The USBWA is one of the four “major” NCAA-recognized All-America teams that the NCAA uses for its consensus All-America teams. The other three are the Associated Press, the National Association of Basketball Coaches and the Sporting News.

He is the 21st player to earn consensus first-team All-America honors in program history. He's joined by Basil Hayden (1921), (1925), Forest Sale (1932, 33), (1935), Bob Brannum (1944), Ralph Beard (1947, 48, 49), Alex Groza (1947, 49), Bill Spivey (1951), Cliff Hagan (1952, 54), Johnny Cox (1959), Cotton Nash (1964), Dan Issel (1970), (1980), (1986), Jamal Mashburn (1993), Ron Mercer (1997), (2010), (2012), Willie Cauley-Stein (2015) and Ulis (2016).

The Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of the Congo native was joined on the USBWA's First Team by Johnny Davis (Wisconsin), Ochai Agbaji (Kansas), Kofi Cockburn (Illinois) and Keegan Murray (Iowa).

Tshiebwe is the 12th player under to earn All-America honors by one of the four major organizations and the fifth player to earn consensus first-team accolades.

Tshiebwe is not only averaging a double-double but doing so with a considerable margin — averaging a team-best 17.0 points and a nation-leading 15.1 rebounds per game. He is looking to become the first Division I player to average at least 15.0 points and at least 15.0 rebounds per game since Drake's Lewis Lloyd and Alcorn State's Larry Smith each did during the 1979-80 season, and the first major-conference player to average at least 16.0 points and at least 15.0 rebounds for a season since Bill Walton at UCLA in 1972-73. He would be the first Wildcat to do it since tallied 19.1 points and 17.7 rebounds per game in 1954-55.

In addition to his offensive and rebounding prowess, on the defensive end Tshiebwe is the only major conference player averaging at least 1.6 blocked shots and 1.6 steals per game. He has also snared 64 more rebounds than the next closest player this season, through games on March 13.

Tshiebwe has corralled at least 10 boards in all but two games this season, and is in the midst of a stretch of 20 straight games with double-digit rebounds. That's a record for the Wildcats dating back to the 1967-68 season with complete game-by-game rebounding records. Dan Issel had two stretches of 12 such games. It's also the longest stretch by any SEC player since at least 1996- 97.

Tshiebwe has been elite on the glass from the very beginning of the season. He set new records for the Champions Classic and UK debut with 20 boards vs. Duke in the season opener, nearly tied the Rupp Arena record with 20 rebounds in his first home game, and then shattered that Rupp record with 28 boards vs. Western Kentucky. That easily surpassed Shaquille O'Neal's previous mark of 21. It's worth noting Tshiebwe did that primarily against the tallest player in college basketball, Jamarion Sharp, who stands at 7-foot-5. With 20 boards the following game against Missouri, his 48 boards tied for the most over a two-game span by any Division I player over the last 25 seasons (according to ESPN Stats & Info).

With 499 rebounds on the season, Tshiebwe has the third-most in one season in UK history, and the most since Cliff Hagan in 1952. Two players have corralled more than 500 in a season (Bill Spivey — 567 in 1951 and Hagan — 528 in 1952). If Tshiebwe continues to average 15 rebounds per game, he would need to play in five more games to break Spivey's single-season record.

Tshiebwe is in the midst of notching 15 straight double-doubles, the longest streak since complete game-by-game rebounding records were kept dating back to 1968. He has totaled 27 double-doubles this season to break Issel's UK single-season record of 26 back in in 1969-70. He trails Navy's David Robinson's single-season record of 31 by just four which was set in 1985-86.

He is currently leading the Wildcats in points per game (17.0), rebounds per game (15.1), steals per game (1.8), blocks per game (1.6) and field-goal percentage with a minimum of 100 attempts (60.2%). Since the 1978-79 season, only one Wildcat has led the team in those five categories (minimum 130 field-goal attempts) in a single season – Davis in 2011-12.

Furthermore, Tshiebwe is responsible for 37.6% of all of UK's rebounds thus far. Taking away team rebounds, that number jumps to 41.0%.

Tshiebwe is racking up postseason honors by the day. The major honors he's won or is a finalist for so far include:

  • NCAA Consensus All-America First Team
  • USBWA First-Team All-America
  • NABC First-Team All-America
  • Associated Press First-Team All-America
  • Sporting News First-Team All-America
  • NABC All-District 20 First Team
  • Southeastern Conference Player of the Year (coaches/media)
  • All-SEC First Team (coaches/media)
  • All-SEC Defensive Team (coaches)
  • USBWA IV Player of the Year
  • USBWA IV All-District Team
  • The Athletic's National Player of the Year
  • Sports Illustrated First-Team
  • The Field of 68 National Player of the Year
  • The Field of 68 First-Team All-America
  • College Hoops Today National Player of the Year
  • USA Today SEC Player of the Year
  • USA Today First-Team All-SEC unanimous selection

On This Day In UK Basketball History

On March 28, 1992, in what many called the “best NCAA Tournament game ever,” Kentucky takes defending NCAA champion Duke into overtime before losing 104-103 in the East Regional finals in Philadelphia. A last-second shot by Christian Laettner sends Duke to the Final Four, and breaks the hearts of Wildcat fans everywhere. It is Cawood Ledford’s last game as the “Voice of the Wildcats.”

 

On March 28, 1998, against Stanford, Kentucky rallied from a 10-point second-half deficit, then grabbed a 5-point overtime lead, before fending off the Cardinals to advance to the title game for the third straight season. Jeff Sheppard canned three long-range three-pointers - two in the final three minutes and one in overtime - en route to a career-high 27 points.

 

On March 28, 2014, unranked Kentucky beat No. 5 Louisville 74-69, in the 2014 NCAA Tournament Sweet 16.  Aaron Harrison buried a three-pointer from the left corner with 39 seconds left that put UK ahead to stay before 41,072 in Lucas Oil Stadium.

 

On March 28, 2015, No. 1 Kentucky defeated No. 8 Notre Dame, 68-66, in the 2015 NCAA Tournament Elite Eight.  With its 37-0 record on the line, Kentucky trailed Notre Dame 59-53 with 6:14 left. UK rallied in front of 19,464 fans in Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena and preserved its perfect season thanks to a crucial blocked shot by Willie Cauley-Stein and two game-deciding free throws from Andrew Harrison in the final seconds.

 

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