Santa Fe New Mexican

Davis, ’Melo among top 1-and-dones

With no Final Four, list seeks to fill gap

- By Steve Megargee

Anthony Davis didn’t need to score big to control a game for Kentucky.

He made that clear during the final performanc­e of his freshman season.

Coach John Calipari recalls the conversati­on Davis had with his teammates after struggling to shoot during the first half of the 2012 NCAA championsh­ip game.

“And I overheard him saying to his teammates, ‘I can’t make a shot. I don’t know what’s going on. You guys shoot the balls. I’ll get every rebound, block every shot and I’ll defend like crazy. Let’s just win this,’ ” Calipari recalled.

Davis shot 1 of 10 from the field that night but still was named the most outstandin­g player of the Final Four because of everything else he did as Kentucky won the national title. He had 16 rebounds, six blocks, five assists and three steals in the 67-59 victory championsh­ip win over Kansas.

With no Final Four this weekend because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, AP put together an informal list of the greatest oneand-done players in the history of men’s college basketball. Davis and Syracuse’s Carmelo Anthony top the list after leading their teams to national titles.

Davis averaged a team-high 14.2 points for Kentucky in 201112 despite ranking fourth on his team in field-goal attempts. He had 10.4 rebounds per game and 186 total blocks. He was the No. 1 overall pick in that year’s NBA Draft.

Davis wasn’t considered a blue-chip prospect until a growth spurt of 7-8 inches in high school helped make him the nation’s consensus No. 1 player.

Calipari recalled how Davis visited campus before his enrollment and met Lee Todd, the University of Kentucky president.

“He says, ‘This is one of the great kids I’ve ever met, I’m so excited,’ and he says, ‘You know what else, coach? He’s going to be here a couple of years. He’s so skinny there’s no way he can leave in a year,’ ” Calipari said. “I laughed, and I said, ‘Dr. Todd, you may be wrong on that front.’ ”

Carmelo Anthony, Syracuse (2002-03)

Anthony averaged 22.2 points and 10 rebounds to earn second-team Associated Press All-America honors while helping Syracuse win the national title. He averaged 26.5 points and 12 rebounds in the Final Four.

The 10-time NBA All-Star provided the $3 million lead gift that led to the constructi­on of the Camelo K. Anthony Basketball Center, a $19 million practice facility for the Syracuse men’s and women’s basketball programs.

“He was here just one year, but he’s stayed with us continuous­ly,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. “Obviously, the contributi­on made it possible for us to build the center, but he shows up, he comes up. He’s just very supportive of what we’ve done. He holds Syracuse in high regard, and that’s important.”

Michael Beasley, Kansas State (2007-08)

Beasley led Division I players in rebounding (12.4) and ranked third in scoring (26.2) to earn first-team AP All-America honors. His 28 double-doubles remain the most ever by a Division I freshman.

“In the era of one-and-dones, you put his stats up against any of them and he’s by far the best one-and-done year of any of the guys out there from a statistica­l standpoint,” said South Carolina coach Frank Martin, who coached Beasley at Kansas State.

Beasley carried Kansas State to a 21-12 record and a round-of-32 appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Beasley, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2008 draft, averaged 12.4 points during his NBA career.

Kevin Durant, Texas (2006-07)

Durant averaged 25.8 points and 11.1 rebounds as a consensus national player of the year. He helped Texas go 25-10 with an NCAA Tournament round-of-32 loss to Southern California.

“His work ethic is second to none,” said Tennessee coach Rick Barnes, who coached Durant at Texas. “He was always a person that I would take the best clips I could find of [Michael] Jordan and LeBron [James] and Kobe [Bryant] and show him those little subtle things those guys did, and he was like a Kodak camera, man. He could click it and almost make it part of his game instantly.”

Durant has gone on to become an NBA MVP and a two-time NBA champion. He made a $3 million donation to the University of Texas in 2018.

Greg Oden, Ohio State (2006-07)

Oden earned first-team AP All-America honors as Ohio State went 35-4 and lost to Florida in the NCAA Tournament final. Three of the Buckeyes’ top four scorers were freshmen and former AAU teammates: Oden, Mike Conley and Daequan Cook.

Oden averaged 15.7 points, 9.6 rebounds and 3.3 blocks for Ohio State and was picked No. 1 overall in the 2007 draft. Injuries caused the 7-footer to play just 105 NBA regular-season games.

Oden earned his degree from Ohio State in May. Oden says he advises athletes for a financial education company. He played in the Big3 league last year.

“Dedicating my life to ball and then that not working out, it was kind of a reset,’’ Oden said. “You kind of see, ‘OK, so what’s next in your life?’ If all you do is play ball, you never really figure out that next chapter of life after. I was kind of just thrown into that. Going back to school and getting my degree was something I had to do for me to go on a path and figure out what’s next in life.”

Zion Williamson, Duke (2018-19)

Williamson swept the national player of the year awards during his lone season at Duke.

He averaged 22.6 points,

8.9 rebounds, 2.1 steals and 1.8 blocks. Williamson helped Duke go 32-6 with a loss to Michigan State in an NCAA regional final. The New Orleans Pelicans selected Williamson with the top pick in the 2019 draft.

 ?? BILL HABER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Kentucky’s Anthony Davis, left, and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, right, kiss the trophy after the NCAA Tournament championsh­ip in 2012 against Kansas. Davis had 16 rebounds, six blocks, five assists and three steals in the Wildcats’ 67-59 win.
BILL HABER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Kentucky’s Anthony Davis, left, and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, right, kiss the trophy after the NCAA Tournament championsh­ip in 2012 against Kansas. Davis had 16 rebounds, six blocks, five assists and three steals in the Wildcats’ 67-59 win.

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