Men's Basketball
Oscar Tshiebwe on Wooden Award Late Season Top 20

Oscar Tshiebwe on Wooden Award Late Season Top 20

by Deb Moore

LEXINGTON, Ky. – With 10 regular-season games remaining, Kentucky junior forward Oscar Tshiebwe is firmly in the discussion for every notable postseason award. Tshiebwe added a fifth major midseason national recognition on Monday with his inclusion on the Wooden Award’s Late Season Top 20 for its National Player of the Year award. 
 
Tshiebwe also been named to the Lute Olson Watch List for its player of the year honors. The Sporting News and The Athletic have both tabbed Tshiebwe to their midseason All-America Teams, and he’s among 10 finalists for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year honor.
 
Kentucky is one of two Southeastern Conference programs included in the top 20 late season favorites for the Wooden Award’s Player of the Year. All 20 players on the Wooden Watch were named to the Wooden Award Midseason Top 25 earlier this month.
 
The players on the list are considered strong candidates for the 2022 John R. Wooden Award Men’s Player of the Year. Players not chosen to the late season list are still eligible for the Wooden Award national ballot.
 
The national ballot consists of 15 top players who have proven to their universities that they are also making progress toward graduation and maintaining at least a cumulative 2.0 grade-point average.
 
Nearly 1,000 voters will rank in order 10 of those 15 players, who have qualified as meeting the standards set forth by Coach Wooden and the Wooden Award Steering Committee. Voting will open prior to the start of the NCAA Tournament and will allow voters to take into consideration performance during early round games. The Wooden Award All-American Team will be announced the week of the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament. The winner of the 2022 John R. Wooden Award will be presented following the NCAA Tournament in April.
 
Kentucky’s Anthony Davis is the only winner in program history. He claimed the honor in 2012 after helping lead Kentucky to its eighth national championship in program history.
 
Tshiebwe has made a national name for himself with rebounding numbers that haven’t been seen in decades at the Division I college basketball level.
 
Through games on Jan. 29, Tshiebwe led the country in rebounds per game (15.1), offensive rebounds per game (5.1), offensive rebounding percentage (20.1%) and defensive rebounding percentage (36.5%).
 
Tshiebwe has five 20 or more rebounding efforts, tying Blake Griffin and Tim Duncan for the most by a major-conference player since 1996-97. Only one other player has at least two such games.
 
The Democratic Republic of the Congo native has amassed 317 total rebounds on the season, 46 more than the next closest player this season.
 
There’s certainly been more than one defining moment for Tshiebwe as he leads the Wildcats in scoring (16.3), rebounding (15.1), steals (1.7), blocks (1.5) and field-goal percentage (61.5%).
 
Included in his five 20-rebound games was a record-setting 28-board performance in a dominating win over Western Kentucky. The 28 boards crushed the Rupp Arena record of 21 previously held by Shaquille O’Neal.
 
Not only did Tshiebwe record more rebounds than WKU’s entire team – and against the tallest player in the country, Jamarion Sharp, who stands at 7-foot-5 – his total tied for the sixth-most rebounds in UK history and the most in more than 45 years, when Mike Phillips corralled 28 caroms in an overtime game vs. Tennessee on Jan. 10, 1976. They are the most for a Wildcat in a regulation-length game in more than 52 years, when Dan Issel grabbed 29 rebounds vs. LSU on Feb. 22, 1969. According to STATS, his 28 rebounds are also the most in Division I college basketball since Kendall Gray from Delaware State recorded 30 at Coppin State on March 5, 2015.
 
Against Mississippi State on Jan. 25, Tshiebwe logged 21 points and 22 rebounds to become the first UK player to have a 20-20 game since Phillips achieved the feat twice in 1976.
 
Tshiebwe is looking to become the first Division I player to average at least 15.0 points per game 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.
 
The last UK player to average at least 14.0 rebounds per game in a season was Ed Beck in 1956-57. Bob Burrow owns the Kentucky single-season record of 17.7 rebounds per game, which was set during the 1954-55 season. Only two players under John Calipari have averaged double-figure rebounds for a season: Anthony Davis (2012) and Julius Randle (2014) both hauled in 10.4 per game.
 
Put another way, Tshiebwe is responsible for 36.3% of all of UK’s rebounds this season. Taking away team rebounds, that percentage jumps to 40.0%.
 
The 255-pound forward is no pushover offensively either. With improved post work and the second-chance opportunities he is creating for himself on the glass, Tshiebwe is shooting 61.5% from the floor and has scored 20 or more points seven times, including a career-high 30 points at Vanderbilt. He was the first UK player to tally a 30-point, 10-rebound game since Patrick Patterson had 33 points and 11 rebounds against Tennessee State on Dec. 22, 2008. Tshiebwe is also the first Wildcat to score at least 29 points in consecutive SEC games since Kenny Walker in February 1985.
 
Tshiebwe was named the Oscar Robertson National Player of the Week by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, the NCAA March Madness National Player of the Week by Andy Katz, and the SEC Co-Player of the Week on Dec. 27.
 
Tshiebwe and the Wildcats return home to face Vanderbilt on Wednesday at 7 p.m. The game will be televised by SEC Network.
 
For the latest on the Kentucky men’s basketball team, follow @KentuckyMBB on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok, and on the web at UKathletics.com.
 

Related Stories

View all