
Candid Coaches: Will Zach Edey win national player of the year in back-to-back seasons?
It's been four decades since someone won the Naismith/Wooden/Robertson NPOY awards two straight years ... but Edey's got a great shot

It's been four decades since someone won the Naismith/Wooden/Robertson NPOY awards two straight years ... but Edey's got a great shot
By Matt Norlander
In 1958, The Sporting News was the first organization to hand out a national player of the year award in college basketball. In the ensuing years, five more voting houses emerged that gave college basketball six traditionally recognized national player of the year awards: The Naismith Award, The Associated Press, The Wooden Award, The National Association of Basketball Coaches, The Oscar Robertson Award and Sporting News.
In the six-plus decades since, 12 men's basketball players have repeated as national player of the year by winning the honor from one of the six NPOY outfits in back-to-back years. In some years, there is overlap because one player took home some NPOY awards, while another snagged one from a different organization that same season.
Here's the list:
• Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati ('57-58, '58-59, '59-60)
• Jerry Lucas, Ohio State ('60-61, '61-62)
• Bill Bradley, Princeton ('63-64, '64-65)
• Lew Alcindor, UCLA ('66-67, '67-68, '68-69)
• Pete Maravich, LSU ('68-69, '69-70)
• Bill Walton, UCLA ('71-72, '72-73, '73-74)
• David Thompson, NC State ('73-74, '74-75)
• Mark Aguirre, DePaul ('79-80, '80-81)
• Ralph Sampson, Virginia ('80-81, '81-82, '82-83)
• Michael Jordan, UNC ('82-83, '83-84)
• Jay Williams, Duke ('00-01, '01-02)
• Luke Garza, Iowa ('19-20, '20-21)
Because college basketball has no Heisman Trophy analogue, the player of the year situation in hoops can sometimes get sticky. Shane Battier won five of the six NPOY awards in 2001 ... but his teammate, Jay Williams, won the NABC's version of it that season, preventing the sweep and allowing Williams to technically go back-to-back after he won all six in 2002. Obi Toppin won five of the six in 2020, but Sporting News opted for Garza, which then gave the Iowa big man back-to-back allowance in 2021 after he swept all six.
If you're looking for the last person to win NPOY in back-to-back seasons in at least two of the big six awards — and specifically, the most acclaimed ones: Naismith, Wooden and Robertson — you have to go back more than 40 years. Sampson's three-peat at Virginia was the last time men's college basketball truly had a no-doubt-about-it repeat national player of the year winner.
So, we asked 100-plus coaches:
Will Zach Edey repeat as national player of the year?
Yes | 63% |
No | 37% |
For coaches who voted no, here are players who received multiple votes: Hunter Dickinson, Kyle Filipowski, Armando Bacot, Donovan Clingan, Ryan Kalkbrenner.
Quotes that stood out
Why Edey's gonna do it
• "Zach Edey is the most dominant force. He continues to improve and elevate his game and he should not be penalized this season for FDU's miraculous game. If not for that, we would all be in the Zach Edey camp for player of the year."• "I know it's always smarter to take the field, but Edey just ran away with it last season. Purdue is going to be really, really good again. I just don't see how he falls off. So I'll go with Edey. But I won't be shocked if it's another big. Keep an eye on Filipowski."
• "Guy puts up video game numbers."
• "Zach Edey will win National Player of the Year for a second straight season unless there is voter fatigue from watching him dominate. The high-end star power at the guard spot just isn't there and he's the best of the bigs."
• "Edey is the most dominant force in the college game and the college rules allow him to remain dominant as a true low-post center. There is not a player in America that impacts the college game like he does night in and night out. He forces a double team on offense, is nearly impossible to blockout and completely takes away the paint defensively."
• "I think his level of production is at such a high level that, even when he doesn't play well, his numbers are still extremely impressive and the impact he makes on winning is still very high. And they are going to have a very good year."
• "It's hard to think of someone else winning [player of the year] over Edey. He's the most dominant player in college basketball. Last year we played at Purdue, and everything they run goes through him. The underrated reason why I believe he has a chance to repeat is he is playing with great guards in Braden Smith and Fletcher Loyer. As freshmen they did a hell of a job playing with Edey. You'd have to imagine with another year of chemistry, Edey may be even more dominant, if that's possible."