Southland Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year

Southland Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year
Given for the most outstanding basketball player in the Southland Conference
Country United States
History
First award 1964
Most recent Jordan Howard, Central Arkansas

The Southland Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year is a basketball award given to the Southland Conference's most outstanding player. The award was first given following the conference's inaugural basketball season of 1963–64. Five players have won the award two times: Jerry Rook, Larry Jeffries, Andrew Toney, Ryan Stuart and Thomas Walkup. No player has ever won three times.

McNeese State has the most all-time winners with eight. Two conference members have never had a winner: Houston Baptist and Incarnate Word. These schools are relatively new to the league, having both joined in 2013. Another school that entered in 2013, Abilene Christian, has one winner from its past tenure in the conference (1963–1973).

Key

Co-Players of the Year
* Awarded a national Player of the Year award:
Helms Foundation College Basketball Player of the Year (1904–05 to 1978–79)
UPI College Basketball Player of the Year (1954–55 to 1995–96)
Naismith College Player of the Year (1968–69 to present)
John R. Wooden Award (1976–77 to present)
Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player has been awarded the Southland Player of the Year award at that point

Winners

Karl Malone won the award in 1983. He later became the NBA's second all-time leading scorer and a Basketball Hall of Fame inductee.
Demond Mallet (right) was McNeese State's seventh winner of the Southland Conference Player of the Year award.
Season Player School Position Class Reference
1963–64 Jerry Rook Arkansas State Forward Junior
1964–65 Jerry Rook (2) Arkansas State Forward Senior
1965–66 John Dickson Arkansas State Center Senior
1966–67 Larry Jeffries Trinity Forward Sophomore
1967–68 John Ray Godfrey Abilene Christian Guard[1] Senior[2]
1968–69 Larry Jeffries (2) Trinity Forward Senior
1969–70 Kenny Haynes Lamar Guard Senior
1970–71 Luke Adams Lamar Senior
1970–71 Allan Pruett Arkansas State Senior
1971–72 Dwight Lamar Southwestern Louisiana Shooting guard Junior
1972–73 Mike Green Louisiana Tech Center Senior
1973–74 Steve Brooks Arkansas State Senior
1974–75 Henry Ray McNeese State Sophomore
1975–76 Mike McConathy Louisiana Tech Shooting guard Junior
1976–77 Dan Henderson Arkansas State Senior
1977–78 Andrew Toney Southwestern Louisiana Guard Sophomore
1978–79 David Lawrence McNeese State Power forward Junior
1979–80 Andrew Toney (2) Southwestern Louisiana Guard Senior
1980–81 Mike Olliver Lamar Point guard Senior
1981–82 Albert Culton Texas–Arlington Small forward Senior
1982–83 Karl Malone Louisiana Tech Power forward Sophomore
1983–84 Tom Sewell Lamar Shooting guard Junior
1984–85 Joe Dumars McNeese State Point guard/Shooting guard Senior
1985–86 Bobby Jenkins Northeast Louisiana Senior
1986–87 Jerome Batiste McNeese State Forward
1987–88 Tony Worrell North Texas State Senior
1988–89 Deon Hunter North Texas Point guard Senior
1989–90 Anthony Pullard McNeese State Center Senior
1990–91 Carlos Funchess[a] Northeast Louisiana Point guard/Shooting guard Senior
1990–91 Anthony Jones Northeast Louisiana Senior
1991–92 Ryan Stuart Northeast Louisiana Small forward Junior
1992–93 Ryan Stuart (2) Northeast Louisiana Small forward Senior
1993–94 Eric Kubel Northwestern State Center Senior
1994–95 Reggie Jackson Nicholls State Shooting guard Senior
1995–96 Paul Marshall Northeast Louisiana Shooting Guard Junior
1996–97 Rosell Ellis McNeese State Forward Senior
1997–98 Roderic Hall UTSA Guard Sophomore
1998–99 Donte Mathis Southwest Texas State Point guard Senior
1999–00 Mike Smith Louisiana–Monroe Power forward Senior
2000–01 Demond Mallet McNeese State Point guard Senior
2001–02 McEverett Powers UTSA Power forward Senior
2002–03 Donald Cole Sam Houston State Small forward Sophomore
2003–04 LeRoy Hurd UTSA Small forward Senior
2004–05 Joe Thompson Sam Houston State Small forward/Shooting guard Sophomore
2005–06 Ricky Woods Southeastern Louisiana Forward Junior
2006–07 Chris Daniels Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Center Junior
2007–08 Josh Alexander Stephen F. Austin Small forward Junior
2008–09 Matt Kingsley Stephen F. Austin Center Senior
2009–10 Marquez Haynes Texas–Arlington Guard Senior
2010–11 Gilberto Clavell Sam Houston State Small forward Senior
2011–12 Patrick Richard McNeese State Shooting guard/Small forward Senior
2012–13 Taylor Smith Stephen F. Austin Power forward Senior
2013–14 Jacob Parker Stephen F. Austin Power forward Junior
2014–15 Thomas Walkup Stephen F. Austin Shooting guard/Small forward Junior
2015–16 Thomas Walkup (2) Stephen F. Austin Shooting guard/Small forward Senior
2016–17 Erik Thomas New Orleans Power forward Senior
2017–18 Jordan Howard Central Arkansas Shooting guard Senior

Winners by school

School (year joined) Winners Years
McNeese State (1972) 8 1975, 1979, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1997, 2001, 2012
Louisiana–Monroe[b] 7 1986, 1991 (×2)[c], 1992, 1993, 1996, 2000
Arkansas State (1963)[d] 6 1964, 1965, 1966, 1971, 1974, 1977
Stephen F. Austin (1987) 6 2008, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
Lamar (1963/1999)[e] 4 1970, 1971, 1981, 1984
Louisiana Tech[f] 3 1973, 1976, 1983
Louisiana–Lafayette[g] 3 1972, 1978, 1980
Sam Houston State (1987) 3 2003, 2005, 2011
UTSA (1991)[h] 3 1998, 2002, 2004
North Texas[i] 2 1988, 1989
Trinity (1963)[j] 2 1967, 1969
Texas–Arlington (1963)[k] 2 1982, 2010
Abilene Christian (1963/2013)[l] 1 1968
Central Arkansas (2006) 1 2018
New Orleans (2013) 1 2017
Nicholls State (1991) 1 1995
Northwestern State (1987) 1 1994
Southeastern Louisiana (1997) 1 2006
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi (2006) 1 2007
Texas State (1987))[k] 1 1999
Houston Baptist (2013) 0
Incarnate Word (2013) 0
Oral Roberts (2012)[m] 0

Footnotes

References

General
  • "2008–09 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Media Guide" (pdf). Southland Conference. p. 96. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
Specific
  1. "Wildcats on Honor Teams". 2014–15 ACU Men's Basketball Media Guide. Abilene Christian Athletics. p. 35. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
  2. "ACU Men's Basketball Records: Top Career Scorers". 2014–15 ACU Men's Basketball Media Guide. Abilene Christian Athletics. p. 30. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
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