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The Cleveland Cavaliers’ Kyrie Irving, the 2011-12
NBA Rookie of the Year, and the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Ricky Rubio
headline the 2011-12 NBA All-Rookie First Team, the NBA announced today.
Irving was the lone unanimous selection.
UPDATED NBA ROOKIE RANKINGS COMING NOVEMBER 25, 2012
Joining Irving (58 points) and Rubio (49 points) on the NBA All-Rookie
First Team are Denver’s Kenneth Faried (46 points), Golden State’s Klay
Thompson (43 points), New York’s Iman Shumpert (40 points), San Antonio’s
Kawhi Leonard (40 points) and Detroit’s Brandon Knight (40 points).
Irving, the league’s top-scoring rookie, was named Eastern Conference
Rookie of the Month for games played in December/January, February and
March. He finished the season with averages of 18.5 points, 5.4 assists,
3.7 rebounds and 1.1 steals, becoming one of only six rookies in league
history to average at least 18.0 points, 5.0 assists, and 1.0 steal while
shooting at least .450 from the field (Alvan Adams, Grant Hill, Tyreke
Evans, Magic Johnson, and Michael Jordan).
Rubio, the Western Conference Rookie of the Month for games played in
December/January, appeared in 41 games during an injury-shortened debut
season, averaging 10.6 points, a rookie-best 8.2 assists, and 4.2 rebounds.
He also led rookies with 2.2 steals.
Faried averaged 10.2 points, a rookie-best 7.7 rebounds and 1.0 block for
Denver, garnering Western Conference Player of the Month honors for games
played in April. His .586 field goal percentage paced first-year players.
Thompson averaged 12.5 points while shooting a rookie-best .414 from
three-point range, 2.4 rebounds and 2.0 assists.
Shumpert, Leonard and Knight tied for the fifth spot on the All-Rookie
First Team. Shumpert averaged 9.5 points, 3.2 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.7
steals. Leonard posted 7.9 points, 5.1 rebounds, 1.3 steals and 1.1
assists. Knight tallied averages of 12.8 points, 3.8 assists and 3.2
rebounds.
The NBA All-Rookie Second Team consists of Houston’s Chandler Parsons (33
points), Sacramento’s Isaiah Thomas (27 points), New Jersey’s MarShon
Brooks (18 points), Minnesota’s Derrick Williams (16 points) and
Cleveland’s Tristan Thompson (16 points).
The voting panel consisted of the NBA’s 30 head coaches, who were asked to
select five players for the first team and five players for the second
team, regardless of position. Coaches were not permitted to vote for
players on their own team. Two points were awarded for first team votes and
one for second team votes.
Attached are the results of the balloting for the 2011-12 NBA All-Rookie
teams. The balloting was tabulated by the independent accounting firm of
Ernst & Young LLP.
2011-12 NBA ALL-ROOKIE FIRST TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1Pt) Total
Kyrie Irving Cleveland 29 - 58
Ricky Rubio Minnesota 21 7 49
Kenneth Faried Denver 19 8 46
Klay Thompson Golden State 16 11 43
Iman Shumpert New York 15 10 40
Kawhi Leonard San Antonio 14 12 40
Brandon Knight Detroit 13 14 40
2011-12 NBA ALL-ROOKIE SECOND TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1 Pt) Total
Chandler Parsons Houston 10 13 33
Isaiah Thomas Sacramento 5 17 27
MarShon Brooks New Jersey 3 12 18
Derrick Williams Minnesota 2 12 16
Tristan Thompson Cleveland 2 12 16
Other players receiving votes, with point totals (first place votes in
parentheses):
Markieff Morris, Phoenix, 7 (1); Kemba Walker, Charlotte 7; Alec Burks,
Utah 2; Norris Cole, Miami 2; Bismack Biyombo, Charlotte 2; Enes Kanter,
Utah 1; Greg Stiemsma, Boston 1; Gustavo Ayon, New Orleans 1; Nikola
Vucevic, Philadelphia 1.
The 2010-11 NBA Rookie of the Year Blake
Griffin of the Los Angeles Clippers and the Washington Wizards’ John Wall,
the overall No. 1 selection in the 2010 NBA Draft, headline the 2010-11
NBA All-Rookie First Team, the NBA announced today. Griffin was
the lone unanimous selection.
Joining Griffin (58 points) and Wall (57 points) on the NBA
All-Rookie First Team are New York’s Landry Fields (56 points),
Sacramento’s DeMarcus Cousins (54 points), and San Antonio’s Gary Neal
(44).
Griffin, who was selected first overall in the 2009 NBA Draft but missed
the entire 2009-10 season due to injury (stress fracture, left knee),
recorded a rookie-and team-leading 22.5 ppg (12th overall), 12.1 rpg
(fourth overall) and 63 double-doubles (third overall). Griffin became the
first rookie to average at least 20 points and 10 rebounds since Elton
Brand (20.1 ppg, 10.0 rpg) in 1999-2000. A six-time Western
Conference Rookie of the Month selection, Griffin became the first rookie
to appear in an NBA All-Star Game since Yao Ming in 2003.
Wall, a four-time Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month
selection, ranked seventh overall in assists (8.3 apg) and steals (1.75
spg), and finished second among rookies in scoring (16.4 ppg).
Fields, a two-time Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month
selection, ranked fifth among rookies in rebounds (6.4 ppg) and sixth in
scoring (9.7 ppg). He shot .497 from the field (fifth among rookies), .393
from beyond the three-point line (second) and .769 from the charity stripe
(fifth).
Cousins set a Sacramento-era rookie record for total rebounds (699) and
averaged a team-high 8.6 rebounds (second among rookies). Cousins added
14.1 ppg (third among rookies), scoring in double figures in 58 games, and
2.5 apg.
Neal, who went undrafted in 2007, averaged 9.8 points while shooting .451
from the field, .419 from three-point range, and .808 from the free throw
line.
The NBA All-Rookie Second Team consists of Detroit’s Greg Monroe
(42 points), Minnesota’s Wesley Johnson (26 points), the Clippers’ Eric
Bledsoe (19 points), Utah’s Derrick Favors (18 points), and Indiana’s Paul
George (14 points).
The voting panel consisted of the NBA’s 30 head coaches, who were asked to
select five players for the first team and five players for the second
team, regardless of position. Coaches were not permitted to vote for
players on their own team. Two points were awarded for first team votes and
one for second team votes.
Attached are the results of the balloting for the 2010-11 NBA All-Rookie teams:
2010-11 NBA ALL-ROOKIE FIRST TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1Pt) Total
Blake Griffin L.A. Clippers 29 - 58
John Wall Washington 28 1 57
Landry Fields New York 28 - 56
DeMarcus Cousins Sacramento 26 2 54
Gary Neal San Antonio 18 8 44
2010-11 NBA ALL-ROOKIE SECOND TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1Pt) Total
Greg Monroe Detroit 13 16 42
Wesley Johnson Minnesota 4 18 26
Eric Bledsoe L.A. Clippers - 19 19
Derrick Favors Utah 1 16 18
Paul George Indiana 1 12 12
Other players receiving votes, with point totals (first place votes in
parentheses):
Ed Davis, Toronto, 10 (1); Evan Turner, Philadelphia, 12; Jordan Crawford,
Washington, 12; Gordon Hayward, Utah, 7; Omer Asik, Chicago, 6 (1); Patrick
Patterson, Houston, 5; Al-Farouq Aminu, Los Angeles Clippers, 3; Tiago
Splitter, San Antonio, 3; Trevor Booker, Washington, 1; Christian Eyenga,
Cleveland, 1; Ekpe Udoh, Golden State, 1.
Older NBA Rookie Stuff
NBA rookies are players who have not yet played in an NBA regular season game. Most of them are first-year players. And then you occasionally have a player like Greg Oden or Blake Griffin who suffered injury before the regular season started, wound up missing the whole year, and therefore are rookies a year later than expected.
Each NBA season there are usually just a few rookies who emerge as immediate stars. Select few other NBA rookies turn out worthy of starting. But the vast majority come off the bench, often barely receiving any real minutes.
It's fun to watch how the NBA rookie story unfolds over the course of each season. InsideHoops.com for 10+ years now has kept track of the rookie situation as the developments happen.
INSIDEHOOPS NBA ROOKIE OF YEAR WATCH
Updated October 22, 2010
Comments: The rebuilding Wizards will hand Wall the ball immediately and let him do whatever he wants. Wall has crazy speed, quickness, athletic ability, a high basketball IQ and the definite ability to compete for the 2010-11 NBA Rookie of the Year award.
2008-09 College Stats: 22.7 ppg, 14.4 rpg, 2.3 apg, 65.4% FG, 59.0% FT
Comments: Blake was the #1 pick one year ago, but missed the entire regular season due to injury and is still considered an NBA rookie. He's got just as good a shot at the award as Wall. We expect Griffin to average at least 15 points and eight rebounds per game this season.
2009-10 College Stats: 15.1 ppg, 9.8 rpg, 1.0 apg, 55.8% FG, 60.4% FT
Comments: Cousins looks ready to rock, and could put up something in the neighborhood of 15 points and 11 rebounds per game as a rookie. If he ever gets into great shape, he could truly be something special. On a roster like the empty one in Sacramento, Cousins should have an immediate impact. Whether it'll result in actual wins is another story.
Comments: Turner struggled in both summer league and preseason, and while neither of those levels of play properly emulate the NBA regular season, he still hasn't looked ready to make an impact. If that changes, we'll move him up from honorable mention to an actual ranking.
2009-10 College Stats: 16.1 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 3.8 apg, 52.5% FG, 66.0% FT
Comments: A great passing big-man who is probably best used at power forward, though he can also man the center spot. Plenty of room on the Pistons for Monroe to contribute pretty quickly, especially if he gets played at the five.
Comments: Johnson has shooting range and can help stretch the floor for the Wolves while Al Jefferson and Kevin Love work the paint. Tough to say how much ready he is to contribute right away.
2009-10 College Stats: 12.4 ppg, 8.4 rpg, 1.0 apg, 61.1% FG, 62.9% FT
Comments: Favors is super-athletic but extremely raw, and aside from rebounding and blocking shots, it appears he'll take some time before developing into a player the Nets can rely upon. The kid has talent, though, so maybe it'll only be a matter of weeks before they give him bigger minutes and greater responsibility.
ADDITIONAL 2010-11 NBA ROOKIE COMMENTS:
Gordon Hayward (Utah Jazz): Could turn out to be a rotation player and contributor off the bench, which may be more than the rookies we haven't mentioned will be able to say in the near future.
Paul George (Indiana Pacers): There's room for just about anyone on the Pacers to step up alongside Danny Granger and do big things. George, who will likely play when Mike Dunleavy sits down, may be able to do just that. He's worth watching.
Al-Farouq Aminu (Los Angeles Clippers): Appears raw and probably isn't ready to do anything special right away.
James Anderson (San Antonio Spurs): The Spurs always find diamonds in the rough who surprise everyone and contribute more than expected. Maybe this year it's Anderson.
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2009-10 NBA All-Rookie Teams
April 20, 2010
Tyreke Evans of the Sacramento Kings, Brandon Jennings of the Milwaukee Bucks and Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors were unanimous selections to the 2009-10 NBA All-Rookie First Team, the NBA announced today.
Rounding out the NBA All-Rookie First Team are New Orleans’ Darren Collison (46 points) and Chicago’s Taj Gibson (41 points).
The 2009-10 Rookie of the Year, Evans averaged a rookie- and team-leading 20.1 points, as well as a team-high 5.8 assists (2nd among rookies) and 5.3 rebounds. Evans joined Oscar Robertson, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James as the only players in NBA history to average at least 20 points, five rebounds, and five assists in their rookie seasons. Among rookies, Evans also was first in minutes (37.2 mpg) and second in steals (1.51 spg), while leading in free throws made (348) and attempted (465).
Jennings, a four time Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month selection (October/November, December, January, March) ranked third among rookies in scoring (15.5 ppg), assists (5.7 apg) and steals 1.28. Jennings announced his presence as a top rookie early on, rattling off a 55-point game on Nov. 14 vs. Golden State.
Curry, a three time Western Conference Rookie of the Month selection (January, March, April) ranked second among rookies in scoring (17.5 ppg) and finished first in assists (5.9 apg), steals (1.9 spg), minutes (37.2), free throw percentage (.885) and three-point percentage (.437). Curry’s 166 three-pointers made led all rookies.
Collison provided steady point guard play for the Hornets in place of injured incumbent Chris Paul, ranking among the top 10 for rookies in scoring (sixth – 12.4 ppg), assists (T-third – 5.7 apg) and steals (sixth – 1.03 spg). Collison was named the Western Conference Rookie of the Month for February.
Gibson gave the Bulls a frontcourt boost, leading all rookies in rebounding (7.5 rpg) and field goal percentage (.494), while placing second in blocks (1.27 bpg). The durable Gibson, who averaged 9.0 points in his first season, appeared in all 82 games for the Bulls, making 70 starts.
The NBA All-Rookie Second Team consists of New Orleans’ Marcus Thornton (31 points), San Antonio’s DeJuan Blair (30 points), Oklahoma City’s James Harden (22 points), Minnesota’s Jonny Flynn (22 points) and Detroit’s Jonas Jerebko (22 points).
The voting panel consisted of the NBA’s 30 head coaches, who were asked to select five players for the first team and five players for the second team, regardless of position. Coaches were not permitted to vote for players on their own team. Two points were awarded for first team votes and one for second team votes.
2009-10 NBA ALL-ROOKIE FIRST TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1 Pt) Total Points
Tyreke Evans Sacramento 29 -, total 58
Brandon Jennings Milwaukee 29 -, total 58
Stephen Curry Golden State 29 -, total 58
Darren Collison New Orleans 20 6, total 46
Taj Gibson Chicago 15 11, total 41
2009-10 NBA ALL-ROOKIE SECOND TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1 Pt) Total Points
Marcus Thornton New Orleans 6 19, total 31
DeJuan Blair San Antonio 6 18, total 30
James Harden Oklahoma City 4 14, total 22
Jonny Flynn Minnesota 4 14, total 22
Jonas Jerebko Detroit 2 18, total 22
Other players receiving votes, with point totals (first place votes in parentheses):
Wesley Matthews, Utah, 16 (3); Omri Casspi, Sacramento, 13; Chase Budinger, Houston, 8; Ty Lawson, Denver, 7; Jrue Holiday, Philadelphia, 7 (1); Serge Ibaka, Oklahoma City, 6 (1); Toney Douglas, New York, 2 (1); Rodrigue Beaubois, Dallas, 1; Sam Young, Memphis, 1; DeMar, DeRozan, 1.
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2009-10 NBA Rookie of the Year award
April 20, 2010
Tyreke Evans of the Sacramento Kings is the recipient of the Eddie Gottlieb Trophy as the 2009-10 NBA Rookie of the Year, the NBA announced today.
Evans received 67 first-place votes (491 points) from a panel of 123 sportswriters and broadcasters throughout the United States and Canada. Golden State’s Stephen Curry finished second with 391 points and Milwaukee’s Brandon Jennings finished third with 204 points. Players were awarded five points for each first-place vote, three points for each second-place vote and one point for each third-place vote.
Selected with the fourth overall pick in the NBA Draft 2009, Evans averaged a rookie-and team-leading 20.1 points, as well as a team-high 5.8 assists (2nd among rookies) and 5.3 rebounds. Evans joined Oscar Robertson, Michael Jordan, and LeBron James as the only players in NBA history to average at least 20 points, five rebounds, and five assists in their rookie seasons. Among rookies, Evans also was first in minutes (37.2 mpg) and second in steals (1.51 spg), while leading in free throws made (348) and attempted (465).
A two-time Western Conference Rookie of the Month selection (October/November and December), Evans scored 20 or more points in 41 games this season, tops among rookies and the most 20-point games by a rookie in the Sacramento era. The 6-6 guard had a seven-game streak (Nov. 7-23) of scoring 20 or more points, tying him with Lionel Simmons for the most consecutive 20-point games by a rookie in the Sacramento era. Evans was named the MVP of the 2010 Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam on Feb. 12, at NBA All-Star in Dallas, recording 26 points, six rebounds, five assists, and five steals in leading the Rookies to a 140-128 win. On March 10 vs. Toronto, Evans became the first Sacramento-era rookie to record a triple-double with 19 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists.
The Eddie Gottlieb Trophy is named in honor of Eddie Gottlieb, one of the NBA’s founders who coached the Philadelphia Warriors to the NBA championship in 1946-47.
2009-10 NBA ROOKIE OF THE YEAR AWARD VOTING RESULTS
Rookie, Team 1st 2nd 3rd, Total Vote Points
Tyreke Evans, Sacramento, 67 50 6, total 491
Stephen Curry, Golden State, 43 50 26, total 391
Brandon Jennings, Milwaukee, 12 22 78, total 204
Darren Collison, New Orleans, 1 1 9, total 17
Jonny Flynn, Minnesota, - - 2, total 2
Taj Gibson. Chicago, - - 2, total 2
ALL-TIME NBA ROOKIE OF THE YEAR AWARD WINNERS
1952-53 - Don Meineke, Fort Wayne
1953-54 - Ray Felix, Baltimore
1954-55 - Bob Pettit, Milwaukee
1955-56 - Maurice Stokes, Rochester
1956-57 - Tom Heinsohn, Boston
1957-58 - Woody Sauldsberry, Philadelphia
1958-59 - Elgin Baylor, Minneapolis
1959-60 - Wilt Chamberlain, Philadelphia
1960-61 - Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati
1961-62 - Walt Bellamy, Chicago
1962-63 - Terry Dischinger, Chicago
1963-64 - Jerry Lucas, Cincinnati
1964-65 - Willis Reed, New York
1965-66 - Rick Barry, San Francisco
1966-67 - Dave Bing, Detroit
1967-68 - Earl Monroe, Baltimore
1968-69 - Wes Unseld, Baltimore
1969-70 - Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Milwaukee
1970-71 - Dave Cowens, Boston (tie)
- Geoff Petrie, Portland (tie)
1971-72 - Sidney Wicks, Portland
1972-73 - Bob McAdoo, Buffalo
1973-74 - Ernie DiGregorio, Buffalo
1974-75 - Keith Wilkes, Golden State
1975-76 - Alvan Adams, Phoenix
1976-77 - Adrian Dantley, Buffalo
1977-78 - Walter Davis, Phoenix
1978-79 - Phil Ford, Kansas City
1979-80 - Larry Bird, Boston
1980-81 - Darrell Griffith, Utah
1981-82 - Buck Williams, New Jersey
1982-83 - Terry Cummings, San Diego
1983-84 - Ralph Sampson, Houston
1984-85 - Michael Jordan, Chicago
1985-86 - Patrick Ewing, New York
1986-87 - Chuck Person, Indiana
1987-88 - Mark Jackson, New York
1988-89 - Mitch Richmond, Golden State
1989-90 - David Robinson, San Antonio
1990-91 - Derrick Coleman, New Jersey
1991-92 - Larry Johnson, Charlotte
1992-93 - Shaquille O'Neal, Orlando
1993-94 - Chris Webber, Golden State
1994-95 - Grant Hill, Detroit (tie)
- Jason Kidd, Dallas (tie)
1995-96 - Damon Stoudamire, Toronto
1996-97 - Allen Iverson, Philadelphia
1997-98 - Tim Duncan, San Antonio
1998-99 - Vince Carter, Toronto
1999-00 - Elton Brand, Chicago (tie)
- Steve Francis, Houston (tie)
2000-01 - Mike Miller, Orlando
2001-02 - Pau Gasol, Memphis
2002-03 - Amar'e Stoudemire, Phoenix
2003-04 - LeBron James, Cleveland
2004-05 - Emeka Okafor, Charlotte
2005-06 - Chris Paul, New Orleans/Okla. City
2006-07 - Brandon Roy, Portland
2007-08 - Kevin Durant, Seattle
2008-09 -Derrick Rose, Chicago
2009-10 –Tyreke Evans, Sacramento