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District 6 NABC All-District team

weberwildcat

Active member
The National Association of Basketball Coaches All-District first and second team for District 6 announced.

McCoy is one of 240 players around the nation in 24 districts to earn All-District honors.

The NABC Division I All-District teams recognize the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. They are selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC. The 240 student-athletes are now eligible for the State Farm Coaches Division I All-America teams to be announced on April 4.

District 6 NABC All-District team
FIRST TEAM
Gary Wilkinson, Utah State
Mac Hopson, Idaho
Luke Babbitt, Nevada
Jahmar Young, New Mexico State
Armon Johnson, Nevada

SECOND TEAM
Jared Quayle, Utah State
Tai Wesley, Utah State
Kellen McCoy, Weber State
Roderick Flemings, Hawai'i
Jeremiah Dominguez, Portland State


The 2 Big Sky players were the only non-WAC selections.
 
300px-Nabc.jpg


The National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri was founded in 1927 by Phog Allen, the University of Kansas basketball coach.[1]
Formation of the NABC began when Joint Basketball Rules Committee, then the central governing authority of the game, announced without notice that it had adopted a change in the rules which virtually eliminated dribbling. Allen, a student of basketball founder James Naismith, organized a nationwide protest which ultimately resulted in the dribble remaining part of the game.
In 1939 the NABC held the first national basketball tournament in Evanston, Illinois at the Northwestern Fieldhouse.[1] Oregon defeated Ohio State for the first tournament championship. The next year, the NABC asked the NCAA to take over the administration of the tournament.[1] In exchange, the NCAA provided complimentary tickets for NABC members to the Finals and placed an NABC member on its Tournament Committee.[1]
NABC initiatives include establishing the original Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts, the format of today's NCAA Basketball Tournament, and a proposal to build and operate the 60,000 square foot College Basketball Experience and National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame at the Sprint Center arena in downtown Kansas City, Missouri. This facility was completed on October 10, 2007.
Awards given by the organization include the Defensive Player of the Year, Pete Newell Big Man Award, Coach of the Year and Player of the Year.
 

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