| 1999 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | 1998–99 NCAA Division I men's basketball season | 
The Consensus 1999 College Basketball All-American team, as determined by aggregating the results of four major All-American teams.[1] To earn "consensus" status, a player must win honors from a majority of the following teams: the Associated Press, the USBWA, The Sporting News and the National Association of Basketball Coaches.
1999 Consensus All-America team
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Elton Brand | C | Sophomore | Duke | 
| Mateen Cleaves | G | Junior | Michigan State | 
| Richard Hamilton | F-G | Junior | Connecticut | 
| Andre Miller | G | Senior | Utah | 
| Jason Terry | G | Senior | Arizona | 
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Evan Eschmeyer | C | Senior | Northwestern | 
| Steve Francis | G | Junior | Maryland | 
| Trajan Langdon | G | Senior | Duke | 
| Chris Porter | F | Junior | Auburn | 
| Wally Szczerbiak | F | Senior | Miami (OH) | 
Individual All-America teams
| All-America Team | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First team | Second team | Third team | |||||
| Player | School | Player | School | Player | School | ||
| Associated Press[2] | Elton Brand | Duke | Evan Eschmeyer | Northwestern | Ron Artest | St. John's | |
| Mateen Cleaves | Michigan State | Steve Francis | Maryland | Baron Davis | UCLA | ||
| Richard Hamilton | Connecticut | Trajan Langdon | Duke | Tim James | Miami (FL) | ||
| Andre Miller | Utah | Chris Porter | Auburn | Quincy Lewis | Minnesota | ||
| Jason Terry | Arizona | Wally Szczerbiak | Miami (OH) | Scoonie Penn | Ohio State | ||
| USBWA[3] | Elton Brand | Duke | Evan Eschmeyer | Northwestern | No third team | ||
| Mateen Cleaves | Michigan State | Steve Francis | Maryland | ||||
| Richard Hamilton | Connecticut | Trajan Langdon | Duke | ||||
| Andre Miller | Utah | Scoonie Penn | Ohio State | ||||
| Jason Terry | Arizona | Chris Porter | Auburn | ||||
| Wally Szczerbiak | Miami (OH) | ||||||
| NABC[4] | Elton Brand | Duke | Evan Eschmeyer | Northwestern | Ron Artest | St. John's | |
| Mateen Cleaves | Michigan State | Steve Francis | Maryland | Tim James | Miami (FL) | ||
| Richard Hamilton | Connecticut | Chris Porter | Auburn | Quincy Lewis | Minnesota | ||
| Trajan Langdon | Duke | Wally Szczerbiak | Miami (OH) | Mark Madsen | Stanford | ||
| Andre Miller | Utah | Jason Terry | Arizona | Scoonie Penn | Ohio State | ||
| Sporting News[5] | Elton Brand | Duke | Mateen Cleaves | Michigan State | No third team | ||
| Richard Hamilton | Connecticut | Evan Eschmeyer | Northwestern | ||||
| Andre Miller | Utah | Steve Francis | Maryland | ||||
| Wally Szczerbiak | Miami (OH) | Trajan Langdon | Duke | ||||
| Jason Terry | Arizona | Chris Porter | Auburn | ||||
AP Honorable Mention:[6]
- William Avery, Duke
 - Pat Bradley, Arkansas
 - Rodney Buford, Creighton
 - Keith Carter, Mississippi
 - Eric Chenowith, Kansas
 - Ed Cota, North Carolina
 - Khalid El-Amin, Connecticut
 - Chico Fletcher, Arkansas State
 - A. J. Guyton, Indiana
 - Venson Hamilton, Nebraska
 - Jumaine Jones, Georgia
 - Arthur Lee, Stanford
 - Melvin Levett, Cincinnati
 - Todd MacCulloch, Washington
 - Mark Madsen, Stanford
 - Kenyon Martin, Cincinnati
 - Sean Mason, Wisconsin
 - BJ McKie, South Carolina
 - Chris Mihm, Texas
 - Terence Morris, Maryland
 - Lee Nailon, TCU
 - Lamar Odom, Rhode Island
 - Ademola Okulaja, North Carolina
 - Scott Padgett, Kentucky
 - Morris Peterson, Michigan State
 - James Posey, Xavier
 - Laron Profit, Maryland
 - Quentin Richardson, DePaul
 - Doc Robinson, Auburn
 - Shawnta Rogers, George Washington
 - Matt Santangelo, Gonzaga
 - Kenny Thomas, New Mexico
 - Wayne Turner, Kentucky
 
References
- ↑ NCAA Record Book - Award Winners p.137
 - ↑ AP All-America Teams
 - ↑ USBWA Men's All-Americans
 - ↑ All-America - Division I (1990's)
 - ↑ 2005 NCAA Basketball's Finest - All-Americans Archived 2009-07-21 at WebCite p.208
 - ↑ "Brand Named Unanimous All-America Selection". Atlantic Coast Conference. Archived from the original on April 4, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2009.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.