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Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars?

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theExpert
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Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#1 » by theExpert » Tue Oct 5, 2010 6:28 pm

Multiple MVP awards = 10
MVP = 9
Multiple All-NBA selections = 8
All-NBA = 7
Multiple All-Star = 6
Multiple DPOY awards = 5
All-Star = 4
DPOY = 3
Multiple All-Defensive selections = 2
All-Def/ROY/6th Man winner = 1

Honorable mention: Santa Clara, LSU, Kansas, Kentucky

5) North Carolina - 14 points

Current NBA Stars: Vince Carter, Antawn Jamison
Future Stars: Harrison Barnes (number one overall draft prospect, 2011), John Henson (lottery pick, 2011)

You would expect mighty North Carolina to be much higher on this list, but in reality things have dried up for them as of late (at least in terms of producing NBA stars). With high draft picks such as Marvin Williams and Brandan Wright not becoming stars (yet) like had been projected for them, the Tar Heels have gone over a decade since they last produced a star player (brother-in-laws Vince Carter and Antawn Jamison entered the NBA in 1999). There is hope, however, as current Heels John Henson and Harrison Barnes are projected to be lottery picks next June.

4) Alabama - 15 points

Current NBA stars: Gerald Wallace, Mo Williams, Antonio McDyess
Future stars: JaMychal Green (late first round, 2011)

Here is the shocker of all shockers — Alabama, a “football school”, is currently the fourth-best program at producing NBA talent. Better than North Carolina. And UCLA. And Kansas. And Kentucky. Crazy, but it’s true. The Crimson Tide might have only sent 24 players to the NBA in its history, but their current batch of pros have had great careers. However, once Antonio McDyess retires their ranking is going to drop, so they’ll need Gerald Wallace to continue his rise to the upper reaches of NBA stardom and/or current Big Man on Campus, JaMychal Green, to make a big splash in the League.

2) tie - Connecticut - 22 points

Current NBA stars: Ray Allen, Richard Hamilton, Caron Butler, Emeka Okafor, Ben Gordon
Future stars: Kemba Walker (lottery pick, 2011)

No surprise here, as the UConn Huskies have long seemingly had a pipeline from their campus in Storrs to the NBA, at least recently (of their 29 players who have gone to the NBA, almost half are still currently playing). And considering how high in the draft both Emeka Okafor and Ben Gordon went, if they had played to the full potential some had seen in them as NBA pros, UConn’s ranking on the list would be even higher. The past couple of years have been rather quiet, though, with only Stanley Robinson getting drafted last year (and late in the draft, at that) and current point guard Kemba Walker considered a real NBA prospect on the current roster. Is the pipeline drying up?

2) tie - Wake Forest - 22 points

Current NBA stars: Tim Duncan, Chris Paul, Josh Howard
Future stars: Tony Woods (late first round, 2011)

There are stars, and then there’s the level of stars Wake Forest has produced recently. In Tim Duncan and Chris Paul, the Demon Deacons have supplied the NBA with two of the best players in recent history. Also, they should both become the first NBA Hall-of-Famers to call Wake Forest their former home. But Paul better stick around and dominate the NBA for decades yet, because currently Wake Forest has no future NBA stars roaming its campus.

1) Duke - 24 points


Current NBA stars: Grant Hill, Carlos Boozer, Elton Brand, Shane Battier
Future stars: Kyrie Irving (top 10, 2011), Mason Plumlee (top 10, 2011), Kyle Singler (mid-first round, 2011), Nolan Smith (late first round, 2011)

Duke makes it three Atlantic Coast Conference schools (and three North Carolina schools) to crack the top five. It’s no great shock that the reigning NCAA champ tops the list, as the Blue Devils were sending players to the big leagues even before Coach K stepped on campus. And the cupboard is nowhere near being bare, as the current roster has at least four guys who will someday step onto a NBA court. What’s more, top high school player Austin Rivers (and maybe Quincy Miller) has committed to Duke, which means the Blue Devils look to be an impact program — both in the NCAA and the NBA — for years to come.


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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#2 » by Gek » Tue Oct 5, 2010 7:21 pm

Notice that there is a trend among the Duke players that succeed and those that don't.
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#3 » by sgold1961 » Tue Oct 5, 2010 11:50 pm

Why is DPOY a quantifiable component when it is a newer award? Bill Russell was just wondering.
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#4 » by Gek » Wed Oct 6, 2010 12:56 am

UCLA was wondering too. Maybe this is current players?
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#5 » by ndnow » Thu Oct 7, 2010 3:30 am

You gotta put colleges like wake forrest connecticut and alabama ahead of duke and nc considering the quality of kids that flock to those last 2 colleges.
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#6 » by Mamba Venom » Thu Oct 7, 2010 5:01 am

High School
112 points

LeBron KG Kobe ...
Lakers are 22-3 in OT last 6 seasons:Kobe best OT closer!
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#7 » by Gek » Thu Oct 7, 2010 5:46 pm

Mamba Venom wrote:High School
112 points

LeBron KG Kobe ...


Dwight, Amare, Bynum, Jermaine O'Neal, Josh and J.R. Smith, T Mac, Al Harrington, Rashard Lewis, Perkins, Al Jeff, Monta Ellis, Tyson Chandler, Brandon Jennings kind of.... Moses Malone, Darryl Dawkins, Shawn Kemp (technically)


Actually I think Kwame Brown and Eddy Curry are about -200 points and then you have other subtractions like Gerald Green, Jon Bender, Darius Miles, Robert Swift, Sebastian Telfair...




Okay that's all the high school players I remember.
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Re: Which NCAA program is best at producing NBA stars? 

Post#8 » by chyau.00 » Thu Oct 7, 2010 9:12 pm

how far back do u go with your ratings?....because ....


MICHAEL JORDAN.

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