FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Sunday, March 5, 2017
ACC Announces All-Conference Team, Postseason Awards
UNC’s Jackson voted ACC Player of the Year; NC State’s Smith takes Freshman honor
GREENSBORO, N.C. (theACC.com) – Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year Justin Jackson of North Carolina leads the official 2016-17 season award winners and All-ACC basketball team announced by the league on Sunday.
Jackson, a junior from Tomball, Texas, was the choice of 24 members of the voting panel (15 ACC head coaches, selected media) that cast ballots for this year’s postseason honors. Wake Forest’s John Collins placed second with 15 votes.
The voting panel selected NC State’s Dennis Smith Jr. as the ACC Freshman of the Year. Georgia Tech’s Josh Pastner was voted the ACC Coach of the Year, while Virginia Tech’s Seth Allen earned recognition as Sixth Man of the Year. Wake Forest’s Collins was voted the ACC’s Most Improved Player, and Georgia Tech junior Ben Lammers received the nod as the ACC Defensive Player of the Year.
Jackson and Collins are joined on the All-ACC first team by Duke sophomore Luke Kennard, Notre Dame junior Bonzie Colson and Louisville sophomore Donovan Mitchell. Jackson, Kennard and Colson are also among the 15 college players that were named to the John R. Wooden Award national ballot on Saturday.
The 6-foot-8 Jackson is seventh among ACC scorers at 18.3 points per game, and his 85 field goals from 3-point range rank second in the conference. Jackson also averaged 4.7 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game while helping lead the Tar Heels to a 26-6 overall record, the ACC regular-season title and the No. 1 seed for this week’s New York Life ACC Tournament at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.
Jackson has posted 16 games this season of 20-or-more points and has led UNC in scoring in 13 of the last 19 games. He has connected on at least five 3-point shots in five games this season and has 11 games with at least four made 3-pointers.
Duke’s Kennard is the only unanimous selection to this year’s All-ACC first team and leads the conference in scoring at 20.1 points per game. The Franklin, Ohio, sophomore ranks second among ACC players in 3-point field goal percentage (.450), sixth in overall field goals percentage (.504) and fourth in free-throw percentage (.847). He has scored in double figures in 30 of Duke’s 31 game, eclipsing the 20-point mark a team-high 16 times and registering three games of 30-or-more points.
Wake Forest’s Collins leads the ACC in field goal percentage (.623), ranks third among conference scorers with 19.1 points per game and is second in rebounding with 9.8 per contest. After averaging 7.3 points and 3.9 rebounds while starting one game as a freshman in 2015-16, Collins is a major reason the Demon Deacons (18-12) enter this year’s New York Life ACC Tournament on a high note and with a strong case for NCAA Tournament consideration. The West Palm Beach, Florida, sophomore has been a model of consistency, scoring 20-or-more points in 12 consecutive games late in the season – tops in the ACC this year and the most at Wake Forest in more than four decades. He has posted double-doubles in 15 games.
Notre Dame’s Colson leads all ACC players with 18 double-doubles this season, including 10 in conference play. The 6-foot-5 junior from New Bedford, Massachusetts, leads the league in rebounding at 10.4 per game and is the 10th leading scorer at 17.0 points per game. In leading the Fighting Irish to a 23-8 overall mark and a No. 3 ACC Tournament seed, Colson has posted seven 20-point, 10-rebound performances this year. All seven of those performances have come against Power 5 conference teams, including four ACC opponents.
Louisville’s Mitchell averages 15.9 points per game while leading the ACC in steals with 2.13 per outing, and the sophomore has been at his best during the stretch run of the regular season. Over the last 18 games, Mitchell is averaging 19.2 points per game and has made 55-of-132 3-point field goal attempts (.417). He has scored in double figures 23 times this season. The Greenwich, Connecticut, native has scored at least 16 points in 10 of his last 11 games and has nine 20-point games this season.
After being overwhelmingly chosen as the ACC preseason Freshman of the Year by the league’s media members last October, NC State’s Smith met expectations by ranking fifth among ACC scorers with 18.5 points per game and leading the league in assists with 6.3 per contest. Smith has also registered 60 steals in 31 games (1.94 per game), second among ACC players in that category. The Fayetteville, North Carolina, native became the only player in conference history to register two triple-doubles in the same season and has scored at least 30 points in an ACC-best four games.
Smith is joined on the All-ACC second team by Florida State’s Dwayne Bacon (16.9 ppg, 3.8 rpg), Georgia Tech’s Lammers (14.6 ppg, 9.2 rpg), North Carolina’s Joel Berry II (15.1 ppg, 3.7 apg) and Virginia’s London Perrantes (12.8 ppg, 3.9 apg).
Pitt’s Michael Young (19.9 ppg, 6.8 rpg), Clemson’s Jaron Blossomgame (17.3 ppg, 6.2 rpg), Syracuse’s Andrew White III (17.9 ppg, 4.6 rpg), Miami’s Davon Reed (15.3 ppg, 4.8 rpg) and Duke’s Jayson Tatum (16.0 ppg, 7.3 rpg) comprise the All-ACC third team.
Georgia Tech’s Pastner, who won 167 games in his seven seasons at head coach at Memphis, was chosen the ACC Coach of the Year in his first year with the Yellow Jackets. Georgia Tech began the season having lost its top four scorers from the last season’s squad that tied for 11th place in the ACC and was tabbed for a next-to-last finish in the league’s preseason media poll. Instead, Pastner’s team will open play in the ACC Tournament on Tuesday following a 17-win regular season that includes victories over nationally-ranked conference opponents North Carolina, Florida State and Notre Dame.
Virginia Tech’s Allen has come off the bench in 24 of the 29 games in which he has appeared, averaging 13.1 points, 3.3 assists and 2.3 rebounds while playing close to 29 minutes per contest. The redshirt senior from Woodbridge, Virginia, has scored in double-figures 21 times and enters the New York Life ACC Tournament with 20-or-more points in three of his last seven games. Allen played pivotal roles in both Virginia Tech’s one-point wins over Clemson with a big steal and a 3-pointer in the final 1:31 in a road win Jan. 22 and the game-winning shot with 3.8 seconds left at Blacksburg on Feb. 21.
Georgia Tech’s Lammers leads the ACC and ranks third nationally with 3.32 blocked shots per game (103 in 31 games). The 6-foot-10 native of San Antonio, Texas, is third among ACC rebounders, with over two-thirds of his 284 total rebounds coming at the defensive end. Lammers has also been a reliable inside defender for the Yellow Jackets, who have limited their opponents to a collective .398 shooting percentage from the floor and 67 points per game.
NC State’s Smith and Duke’s Tatum are joined on the All-ACC Freshman Team by Florida State’s Jonathan Isaac (12.2 ppg, 7.2 rpg), Georgia Tech’s Josh Okogie (15.5 ppg, 5.1 rpg) and Boston College’s Ky Bowman (14.5 ppg, 5.0 rpg).
Virginia’s Isaiah Wilkins, Louisville’s Mitchell, Miami’s Reed, Florida State’s Xavier Rathan-Mayes and Duke’s Matt Jones join Georgia Tech’s Lammers on the 2016-17 All-ACC Defensive Team.
2016-17 All-ACC Teams, Honors
All-Atlantic Coast Conference
(5 points per 1st team vote, 3 points per 2nd team vote, 1 point per 3rd team vote)
FIRST TEAM School Points
Luke Kennard Duke *265
Justin Jackson North Carolina 256
John Collins Wake Forest 255
Bonzie Colson Notre Dame 253
Donovan Mitchell Louisville 231
SECOND TEAM
Dwayne Bacon Florida State 141
Dennis Smith Jr. NC State 126
Ben Lammers Georgia Tech 109
Joel Berry II North Carolina 102
London Perrantes Virginia 90
THIRD TEAM
Michael Young Pittsburgh 85
Jaron Blossomgame Clemson 67
Andrew White III Syracuse 67
Davon Reed Miami 66
Jayson Tatum Duke 51
ALL-HONORABLE MENTION (10-or-more points)
Kennedy Meeks North Carolina 34
Matt Farrell Notre Dame 25
Zach LeDay Virginia Tech 24
Jerome Robinson Boston College 23
Jonathan Isaac Florida State 20
Seth Allen Virginia Tech 18
Jamel Artis Pittsburgh 17
V.J. Beachem Notre Dame 12
Steve Vasturia Notre Dame 11
Tyler Lydon Syracuse 10
ALL-DEFENSIVE TEAM
Ben Lammers Georgia Tech 50
Isaiah Wilkins Virginia 41
Donovan Mitchell Louisville 39
Davon Reed Miami 25
Xavier Rathan-Mayes Florida State 19
Matt Jones Duke 19
ALL-FRESHMAN TEAM
Dennis Smith NC State 51
Jonathan Isaac Florida State 51
Jayson Tatum Duke 50
Josh Okogie Georgia Tech 49
Ky Bowman Boston College 32
ACC PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Justin Jackson North Carolina 24
John Collins Wake Forest 15
Bonzie Colson Notre Dame 8
Luke Kennard Duke 5
Donovan Mitchell Louisville 1
ACC FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR
Dennis Smith NC State 36
Jayson Tatum Duke 8
Josh Okogie Georgia Tech 3
Ky Bowman Boston College 3
Jonathan Isaac Florida State 3
ACC COACH OF THE YEAR
Josh Pastner Georgia Tech 24
Roy Williams North Carolina 8
Mike Brey Notre Dame 7
Leonard Hamilton Florida State 4
Danny Manning Wake Forest 3
Buzz Williams Virginia Tech 3
Jim Larrañaga Miami 2
Rick Pitino Louisville 2
ACC DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Ben Lammers Georgia Tech 37
Isaiah Wilkins Virginia 6
Kamari Murphy Miami 4
Matt Jones Duke 3
Xavier Rathan-Mayes Florida State 1
Dennis Smith NC State 1
Steve Vasturia Notre Dame 1
ACC MOST IMPROVED
John Collins Wake Forest 26
Ben Lammers Georgia Tech 15
Matt Farrell Notre Dame 9
Justin Jackson North Carolina 1
Luke Kennard Duke 1
Donovan Mitchell Louisville 1
ACC SIXTH MAN OF THE YEAR
Seth Allen Virginia Tech 43
Tadric Jackson Georgia Tech 4
Frank Jackson Duke 3
Marcquise Reed Clemson 2
Markell Johnson NC State 1
*Denotes unanimous