Collison named AP All-American

Senior earns high honor; Hinrich on third team

Nick Collison got an early motivational boost before Kansas University plays Marquette Saturday in the Final Four.

Collison, KU’s 6-foot-9 senior, was named a first-team Associated Press All-American.

Collison earned the honor Thursday, along with Marquette junior standout Dwyane Wade, seniors David West of Xavier and Josh Howard of Wake Forest, and sophomore T.J. Ford of Texas.

Kansas senior guard Kirk Hinrich was named to the AP All-America third team.

Collison’s selection gives the Jayhawks an All-American for the second straight year. Drew Gooden was selected in 2002 as a junior.

Collison averaged 18.4 points and 9.3 rebounds, helping the Jayhawks win the Big 12 Conference regular-season title and earn a No. 2 seed in the tournament and a second straight Final Four appearance.

Collison, an honorable-mention pick last season, was on 42 of 72 first-team ballots and had 281 points.

West, a three-time Atlantic 10 player of the year and the first Xavier player to earn AP All-America honors, was the leading vote-getter on the 2002-03 team.

The 6-9 West, a second-team All-American last year, averaged 20.3 points and 12.0 rebounds for the Musketeers, leading them to a top-10 ranking and a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Kansas University forward Nick Collison blocks Arizona's Channing Frye in last Saturday's West Regional final. Collison was named to the Associated Press All-America first team Thursday. Fellow KU senior Kirk Hinrich was on the third team.

His most remarkable performance came Feb. 8 against Dayton, when he scored 47 points and had 18 rebounds, just missing a double-double in each half.

West, the only preseason All-American to earn the postseason honor, received 64 first-team votes and 344 points from the 72-member national media panel that selects the weekly AP Top 25. Each voter picked three teams and players received points on a 5-3-1 basis. The voting was done before the NCAA Tournament.

The 5-10 Ford averaged 15.0 points and 7.5 assists to lead the Longhorns to a No. 1 seed in the tournament and then to the Final Four, the school’s first since 1947. An honorable-mention pick as a freshman, Ford became the first Texas player to be selected for the first team since Chris Mihm in 2000.

Ford had two more first-team votes than West but finished with 343 points.

Howard was the Atlantic Coast Conference’s player of the year, averaging 20 points and 8.1 rebounds to lead the Demon Deacons to their first outright regular-season league championship in 41 years and a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The 6-6 forward received 47 first-team votes and 303 points to become the first Wake Forest All-American since Tim Duncan in 1997.

Wade was the first Marquette player to make the first team since Butch Lee in 1978. The 6-4 Wade averaged 21.5 points, 6.3 rebounds and 4.1 assists to lead the Golden Eagles to the Conference USA championship, and then to the school’s first Final Four since coach Al McGuire’s team won the national title in 1977.

Wade, an honorable-mention selection as a sophomore, had 273 points and received 43 first-team votes.

Hollis Price of Oklahoma was one of four seniors on the second team. He was joined by Kyle Korver of Creighton, Troy Bell of Boston College and Jason Gardner of Arizona. Freshman Carmelo Anthony of Syracuse was seventh in the voting with 203 points, 58 behind Price.

Seniors made up the third team: Brian Cook of Illinois, Reece Gaines of Louisville, Hinrich, Keith Bogans of Kentucky, and Ron Slay of Tennessee.

Hinrich, an honorable-mention pick as a junior, was also on the preseason All-America team this season with West, Gardner, Luke Walton of Arizona and Erwin Dudley of Alabama.

Last year’s All-America team was comprised of seniors Steve Logan of Cincinnati, Juan Dixon of Maryland and Dan Dickau of Gonzaga, and juniors Gooden and Jason Williams of Duke, both of whom left early for the NBA.