| 2005 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | 2004–05 NCAA Division I men's basketball season | 
The Consensus 2005 College Basketball All-American team, as determined by aggregating the results of four major All-American teams. 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.
2005 Consensus All-America team
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Andrew Bogut | C | Sophomore | Utah | 
| Dee Brown | G | Junior | Illinois | 
| Chris Paul | G | Sophomore | Wake Forest | 
| J. J. Redick | G | Junior | Duke | 
| Wayne Simien | F | Senior | Kansas | 
| Hakim Warrick | F | Senior | Syracuse | 
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Ike Diogu | F | Junior | Arizona State | 
| Luther Head | G | Senior | Illinois | 
| Sean May | C | Junior | North Carolina | 
| Salim Stoudamire | G | Senior | Arizona | 
| Deron Williams | G | Junior | Illinois | 
Individual All-America teams
| All-America Team | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First team | Second team | Third team | |||||
| Player | School | Player | School | Player | School | ||
| Associated Press[2] | Andrew Bogut | Utah | Dee Brown | Illinois | Raymond Felton | North Carolina | |
| Chris Paul | Wake Forest | Ike Diogu | Arizona State | Joey Graham | Oklahoma State | ||
| J. J. Redick | Duke | Luther Head | Illinois | Nate Robinson | Washington | ||
| Wayne Simien | Kansas | Sean May | North Carolina | Deron Williams | Illinois | ||
| Hakim Warrick | Syracuse | Salim Stoudamire | Arizona | Shelden Williams | Duke | ||
| USBWA[3] | Andrew Bogut | Utah | Ike Diogu | Arizona State | No third team | ||
| Chris Paul | Wake Forest | Luther Head | Illinois | ||||
| J. J. Redick | Duke | Sean May | North Carolina | ||||
| Wayne Simien | Kansas | Salim Stoudamire | Arizona | ||||
| Dee Brown | Illinois | Hakim Warrick | Syracuse | ||||
| NABC[4] | Andrew Bogut | Utah | Dee Brown | Illinois | Joey Graham | Oklahoma State | |
| Chris Paul | Wake Forest | Ike Diogu | Arizona State | Rashad McCants | North Carolina | ||
| J. J. Redick | Duke | Francisco Garcia | Louisville | Nate Robinson | Washington | ||
| Wayne Simien | Kansas | Luther Head | Illinois | Craig Smith | Boston College | ||
| Hakim Warrick | Syracuse | Deron Williams | Illinois | Salim Stoudamire | Arizona | ||
| Sporting News[5] | Andrew Bogut | Utah | Ike Diogu | Arizona State | No third team | ||
| Dee Brown | Illinois | Sean May | North Carolina | ||||
| Chris Paul | Wake Forest | Salim Stoudamire | Arizona | ||||
| J. J. Redick | Duke | Hakim Warrick | Syracuse | ||||
| Wayne Simien | Kansas | Deron Williams | Illinois | ||||
AP Honorable Mention:[6]
- Eddie Basden, Charlotte
 - Brandon Bass, LSU
 - Turner Battle, Buffalo
 - Tim Begley, Penn
 - Mike Bell, Florida Atlantic
 - Josh Boone, Connecticut
 - Seamus Boxley, Portland State
 - Darren Brooks, Southern Illinois
 - Pat Carroll, St. Joseph's
 - Taylor Coppenrath, Vermont
 - Travis Diener, Marquette
 - David Doubley, Pacific
 - Jared Dudley, Boston College
 - Nick Fazekas, Nevada
 - Channing Frye, Arizona
 - Francisco García, Louisville
 - Ryan Gomes, Providence
 - Danny Granger, New Mexico
 - Caleb Green, Oral Roberts
 - Blake Hamilton, Monmouth
 - Kevin Hamilton, Holy Cross
 - Chuck Hayes, Kentucky
 - Chakowby Hicks, Norfolk State
 - Julius Hodge, NC State
 - Jarrett Jack, Georgia Tech
 - Willie Jenkins, Tennessee Tech
 - Alex Loughton, Old Dominion
 - John Lucas III, Oklahoma State
 - Ed McCants, Wisconsin-Milwaukee
 - Rashad McCants, North Carolina
 - Juan Mendez, Niagara
 - Adam Morrison, Gonzaga
 - Yemi Nicholson, Denver
 - Pele Paelay, Coastal Carolina
 - Anthony Roberson, Florida
 - Lawrence Roberts, Mississippi State
 - Craig Smith, Boston College
 - Steven Smith, La Salle
 - Joe Thompson, Sam Houston State
 - Obie Trotter, Alabama A&M
 - Ronny Turiaf, Gonzaga
 - Eric Williams, Wake Forest
 - Kennedy Winston, Alabama
 - Brendan Winters, Davidson
 
Academic All-Americans
On March 2, 2005, CoSIDA and ESPN The Magazine announced the 2005 Academic All-America team, with Chris Hill headlining the University Division as the men's college basketball Academic All-American of the Year.[7] The following is the 2004–05 ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America Men's Basketball Team (University Division) as selected by CoSIDA:
| Player | School | Class | GPA and major | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Eric Castro | Southern Methodist | Senior | 3.80 Sociology/Accounting | 
| Will Emerson | Mercer | Junior | 4.00 Biology | 
| Johannes Herber | West Virginia | Junior | 4.00 Political Science | 
| Chris Hill | Michigan State | Senior | 3.75 Finance | 
| Derek Winans | Southeast Missouri State | Senior | 3.97 Business | 
| Player | School | Class | GPA and major | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Turner Battle | Buffalo | Senior | 3.56 Communications | 
| Erik Benzel | Denver | Senior | 3.69 Finance | 
| Craig Forth | Syracuse | Senior | 3.85 Inclusive Education and Geography | 
| Dan Grunfeld | Stanford | Junior | 3.66 American Studies | 
| Neil Plank | Illinois State | Junior | 4.00 Finance | 
| Player | School | Class | GPA and major | 
|---|---|---|---|
| David Erbes | North Dakota State | Senior | 3.88 Agricultural Economics | 
| Christian Maråker | Pacific | Senior | 3.46 Sports Sciences | 
| Dan Oppland | Valparaiso | Junior | 3.49 Physical Education/ Sports Management | 
| Chris Paul | Wake Forest | Sophomore | 3.21 Undecided | 
| Dennis Trammell | Ball State | Senior | 3.42 Business Management | 
References
- ↑ Consensus Teams from 2009 NCAA men's basketball Record book (Awards section)
 - ↑ Simien, Warrick, Redick and Paul make team
 - ↑ USBWA Men's All-Americans
 - ↑ All-America - Division I (2000's)
 - ↑ Sporting News All-America teams: Cream of the crop
 - ↑ "Brooks Named Honorable Mention Associated Press All-American". Southern Illinois University. Archived from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2009.
 - ↑ "Chris Paul Is Named Academic All-American". CBS SPorts. March 2, 2005. Archived from the original on May 28, 2013. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.