2009–10 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season

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2009–10 SEC Men's Basketball Season
10–11
 →
2009–10 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
East
No. 2 Kentucky 14 2   .875 35 3   .921
No. 21 Vanderbilt 12 4   .750 24 9   .727
No. 15 Tennessee 11 5   .688 28 9   .757
Florida 9 7   .563 21 13   .618
South Carolina 6 10   .375 15 16   .484
Georgia 5 11   .313 14 17   .452
West
Mississippi State 9 7   .563 24 12   .667
Mississippi 9 7   .563 24 11   .686
Arkansas 7 9   .438 14 18   .438
Alabama 6 10   .375 17 15   .531
Auburn 6 10   .375 15 17   .469
LSU 2 14   .125 11 20   .355
AP Poll

The 2009–10 Southeastern Conference men's basketball season began with practices on October 17, 2009, and ended with the Southeastern Conference (SEC) Tournament on March 11–14, 2010 at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.

Pre-season polls and teams

2009–10 SEC Men's Basketball Pre-Season Poll:

SEC Media[1]
SEC East
1. Kentucky
2. Tennessee
3. Vanderbilt
4. South Carolina
5. Florida
6. Georgia
SEC West
1. Mississippi State
2. Ole Miss
3. Alabama
4. LSU
5. Arkansas
6. Auburn

Pre-Season All-SEC Teams

SEC Media[1] SEC Coaches[2]
Devan Downey South Carolina
Patrick Patterson Kentucky
Tyler Smith Tennessee
Jarvis Varnado Mississippi State
Terrico White Ole Miss
Devan Downey South Carolina
Tasmin Mitchell LSU
AJ Ogilvy Vanderbilt
Patrick Patterson Kentucky
Tyler Smith Tennessee
Jarvis Varnado Mississippi State
Michael Washington Arkansas
Terrico White Ole Miss
  • SEC Coaches select 8 players
  • Players in bold are choices for SEC Player of the Year

Rankings

Legend
  Increase in ranking
  Decrease in ranking
  Not ranked previous week
  Pre[3] Wk
1
Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
Wk
11
Wk
12
Wk
13
Wk
14
Wk
15
Wk
16
Wk
17
Wk
18
Final
Alabama AP
C
Arkansas AP
C
Auburn AP
C
Florida AP RV RV RV 13 10 13 18 RV RV RV
C RV RV RV 17 10 13 18 RV RV
Georgia AP
C
Kentucky AP 4 4 5 5 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 4 3 2 2 3 2
C 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 1 3 2 2 2 3 2
LSU AP RV
C
Mississippi State AP 18 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 23 RV RV RV RV
C 19 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
Ole Miss AP RV RV RV 25 20 15 16 14 21 22 18 25 RV
C RV RV RV RV RV 25 21 21 16 23 24 20 RV RV
South Carolina AP RV RV
C RV
Tennessee AP 10 10 9 11 9 9 16 14 16 9 8 14 14 12 20 19 16 15
C 11 11 11 12 9 9 14 14 15 10 8 14 14 12 18 17 13 13
Vanderbilt AP RV RV 24 RV RV RV RV RV 21 18 22 17 16 13 20
C RV RV 24 RV 24 RV RV 23 20 24 19 20 19 23

Conference tournament

Head coaches

School Name Age Seasons Record Alma Mata Hometown Previous Positions
Alabama Anthony Grant 43 1 0–0 Dayton Miami, FL, U.S. VCU
Arkansas John Pelphrey 41 3 37–28 Kentucky Paintsville, KY, U.S. South Alabama
Auburn Jeff Lebo 43 6 81–76 North Carolina Carlisle, PA, U.S.
Chattanooga
Florida Billy Donovan 44 14 310–126 Providence Rockville Centre, NY, U.S. Marshall
Georgia Mark Fox 40 1 0–0 Eastern New Mexico Garden City, KS, U.S. Nevada
Kentucky John Calipari 50 1 0–0
Clarion
Moon Township, PA, U.S.
New Jersey Nets
Memphis
LSU Trent Johnson 53 2 27–8 Boise State Berkeley, CA, U.S. Nevada
Stanford
Mississippi State Rick Stansbury 49 12 231–128 Campbellsville Brandenburg, KY, U.S.
Ole Miss
Andy Kennedy
41 4 82–52 UAB Louisville, MS, U.S. Cincinnati
South Carolina Darrin Horn 36 2 21–10 Western Kentucky Glasgow, KY, U.S.
Western Kentucky
Tennessee Bruce Pearl 49 5 98–37 Boston College Boston, MA, U.S. Southern Indiana
UW-Milwaukee
Vanderbilt Kevin Stallings 49 11 189–128 Purdue Collinsville, IL, U.S. Illinois State

Post season

NCAA tournament

# of Bids Record Win % R32 S16 E8 F4 CG
4 6–4 .600 2 2 2 0 0
Team Bid Type Seed Results
Kentucky Automatic 1 W 100–71 vs 16
West Virginia
Vanderbilt At-large 4 L 65–66 vs 13 Murray State
Tennessee
At-large 6 W 62–59 vs 11
Michigan State
Florida At-large 10 L 92–99 (2OT) vs 10 BYU

National Invitation Tournament

# of Bids Record Win % R2 R3 SF CG
2 4–2 .667 2 1 1 0
Team Bid Type Seed Results
Mississippi State
At-large 1 W 81–67 vs. 8
Jackson State
L 74–76 vs. 4 North Carolina
Ole Miss At-large 2 W 84–65 vs. 7
Texas Tech
L 63–68 vs 3 Dayton

Highlights and notes

2010 Big East/SEC Invitational[4]
Date SEC Team Big East Team Location Outcome
12/9
Georgia
St. John's Madison Square Garden, New York St. John's 66–56 Big East 1–0
12/9
Kentucky
UConn
Madison Square Garden, New York Kentucky 64–61 Tied 1–1
12/10 Mississippi State DePaul
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
Mississippi State 76–45 SEC 2–1
12/10
Florida
Syracuse
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa
Syracuse 85–73 Tied 2–2
Players of the week[5]

Throughout the conference regular season, the SEC offices named a player of the week each Monday.

Week Player of the week Freshman of the week
11/16
ARK
UK
11/23
UK
UK
11/30
FLA
UK
(2)
12/7 A.J. Ogilvy, VANDY
UK
(3)
12/14 Ravern Johnson, MISS STATE
UK
(4)
12/21
UGA
Reginald Buckner, MISS
12/28 JaMychal Green, BAMA
UK
1/4
UK
John Jenkins, VANDY
1/11
TENN
John Jenkins, VANDY (2)
1/18 Jarvis Varnado, MISS STATE
UK
(2)
1/25
UGA
UK
(2)
2/1 Devan Downey, USC Marshawn Powell, ARK
2/8 Courtney Fortson, ARK
UK
(3)
2/15 Jeffery Taylor, VANDY
UK
(5)
2/22
TENN
UK
(4)
3/1 Jarvis Varnado, MISS STATE (2) John Jenkins, VANDY (3)
3/8 Chris Warren, MISS Tony Mitchell, BAMA
Award Finalists Notes
  • Bob Cousy Award: The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts, on Feb. 4, 2010 announced the final 11 candidates in consideration for the 2010 Bob Cousy Award presented by The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc. This annual award is given to college basketball's top point guard and is named after Hall of Famer and former Boston Celtics guard Bob Cousy. An original list of 73 candidates made up of players from Division I, II and III schools was trimmed by a Hall of Fame appointed, nationally based committee to 20 and has now narrowed that list to a final 11. Devan Downey (South Carolina) and John Wall (Kentucky) were among the 11 finalists.
  • Oscar Robertson Trophy: Three SEC players were among the 16 announced finalists for the 2010 Oscar Robertson Trophy, to be presented to the U.S. Basketball Writers Association's national player of the year. Included among the SEC's candidates are: Kentucky's DeMarcus Cousins, South Carolina's Devan Downey and Kentucky's John Wall.

Awards and honors

All-Americans

All SEC teams and awards

The following individuals received postseason honors after having been chosen by the SEC coaches:

2010 SEC Men's Basketball Individual Awards[6]
Award Recipient(s)
Player of the Year
John Wall, KENTUCKY
Coach of the Year Kevin Stallings, VANDERBILT
Defensive Player of the Year Jarvis Varnado†, F., MISS STATE
Rookie of the Year DeMarcus Cousins, C., KENTUCKY
Scholar-Athlete of the Year Ray Shipman, G., FLORIDA
Sixth Man Award John Jenkins, G., VANDERBILT
2010 All-SEC Men's Basketball Teams[6]
First Team Second Team All-Defensive Team All-Rookie Team
Trey Thompkins†, F., GEORGIA
DeMarcus Cousins†, C., KENTUCKY
Patrick Patterson, F., KENTUCKY
John Wall†, G., KENTUCKY
Jarvis Varnado, F., MISS STATE
Devan Downey†, G., SOUTH CAROLINA
Wayne Chism, F., TENNESSEE
Jermaine Beal†, G., VANDERBILT
Mikhail Torrance, G., ALABAMA
Courtney Fortson, G., ARKANSAS
Erving Walker, G., FLORIDA
Tasmin Mitchell, F., LSU
Chris Warren, G., OLE MISS
Dee Bost, G., MISS STATE
AJ Ogilvy, C., VANDERBILT
Jeff Taylor, F., VANDERBILT
Patrick Patterson, F., KENTUCKY
Jarvis Varnado†, F., MISS STATE
Devan Downey, G., SOUTH CAROLINA
Sam Muldrow, F., SOUTH CAROLINA
Jeff Taylor, F., VANDERBILT
Tony Mitchell, G., ALABAMA
Marshawn Powell†, F., ARKANSAS
Kenny Boynton, G., FLORIDA
Eric Bledsoe†, G., KENTUCKY
DeMarcus Cousins†, C., KENTUCKY
John Wall†, G., KENTUCKY
Reginald Buckner, F., OLE MISS
John Jenkins†, G.,VANDERBILT
- denotes unanimous selection

All-Academic

USBWA All-District team

References

  1. ^ a b "Southeastern Conference".
  2. ^ "2010 SEC Men's Basketball Preseason Awards Announced - KENTUCKY OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE". Archived from the original on November 5, 2009. Retrieved November 3, 2009.
  3. ^ "2010 NCAA Men's Basketball Rankings (Nov. 6)". ESPN. Archived from the original on November 1, 2008. Retrieved October 31, 2008.
  4. ^ "Big East/SEC Invitational". Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2010.
  5. ^ "Southeastern Conference News" (PDF).
  6. ^ a b "Southeastern Conference".