1997-98 Pac-10 Conference Stats & Honors
1997-98 Final Pac-10 Standings
Conference Games All Games
W L Pct. GB Hm. Rd. W L Pct. Hm Rd. Neu.
1. Arizona 17 1 .944 - 9-0 8-1 30 5 .857 15-0 10-2 5-3
2. Stanford 15 3 .833 2 7-2 8-1 30 5 .857 11-2 10-2 9-1
3. UCLA 12 6 .667 5 7-2 5-4 24 9 .727 13-2 7-5 4-2
4. Washington 11 7 .611 6 7-2 4-5 20 10 .667 12-2 6-7 2-1
5. Arizona State 8 10 .444 9 5-4 3-6 18 14 .563 14-4 4-7 0-3
5. Oregon 8 10 .444 9 6-3 2-7 13 14 .481 10-5 3-9 0-0
5. California 8 10 .444 9 5-4 3-6 12 15 .444 9-5 3-10 0-0
8. USC 5 13 .278 12 5-4 0-9 9 19 .321 6-6 3-13 0-0
9. Oregon State 3 15 .167 14 1-8 2-7 13 17 .433 7-8 4-8 2-1
9. Washington St 3 15 .167 14 2-7 1-8 10 19 .345 5-6 3-9 2-4
Final Individual Statistics - All Games
Scoring
G FG 3p-FG FT PTS AVG
1. Jeremy Veal, ASU 32 244 56 122 666 20.8
2. Corey Benjamin, OSU 25 185 29 97 496 19.8
3. J.R. Henderson, UCLA 33 228 4 166 626 19.0
4. Todd MacCulloch, WASH 30 225 0 107 557 18.6
5. Kris Johnson, UCLA 29 188 47 110 533 18.4
6. Michael Dickerson, ARIZ 35 241 57 91 630 18.0
7. Toby Bailey, UCLA 33 206 47 132 591 17.9
7. Geno Carlisle, CAL 22 129 51 85 394 17.9
9. Mike Bibby, ARIZ 35 209 77 108 603 17.2
9. Miles Simon, ARIZ 35 201 57 144 603 17.2
Rebounding
G OFF DEF TOT AVG
1. Carlos Daniel, WSU 28 78 204 282 10.1
2. Todd MacCulloch, WSU 30 94 198 292 9.7
3. Mark Madsen, STAN 27 92 128 220 8.2
4. Tim Young, STAN 35 88 196 284 8.1
5. J.R. Henderson, UCLA 33 87 172 259 7.8
6. Bobby Lazor, ASU 32 80 171 251 7.8
7. Mike Batiste, ASU 32 75 173 248 7.8
8. Sean Marks, CAL 26 64 133 197 7.6
9. A.J. Bramlett, ARIZ 35 100 159 259 7.4
10. Bennett Davison, ARIZ 35 93 140 233 6.7
Field Goal Pct. (min. 4 made PG)
G FG-FGA PCT
1. Todd MacCulloch, WASH 30 225-346 .650
2. Mark Madsen, STAN 27 116-197 .589
3. Bobby Lazor, ASU 32 196-351 .558
4. Mike Batiste, ASU 32 199-358 .556
5. Corey Benjamin, OSU 25 185-343 .539
6. J.R. Henderson, UCLA 33 228-425 .536
7. Baron Davis, UCLA 32 137-259 .529
8 .Kris Johnson, UCLA 29 188-362 .519
9. A.J. Bramlett, ARIZ 35 143-278 .514
10. Tim Young, STAN 35 148-288 .514
3-Pt Field Goal Pct. (min. 1 made PG)
G FG-FGA PCT
1. Ryan Mendez, STAN 34 45-95 .474
2. Arthur Lee, STAN 35 62-140 .443
3. David Moseley, STAN 35 43-102 .422
4. Jeremy Veal, ASU 32 56-133 .421
5. Adam Spanich, USC 28 73-174 .420
6. Henry Madden, ORE 27 31-74 .419
7. Peter Sauer, STAN 35 42-101 .416
8. Kris Johnson, UCLA 29 47-115 .409
9. Deaundra Tanner, OSU 30 37-91 .407
10. Michael Dickerson, ARIZ 35 57-141 .404
Free Throw Pct. (min. 2 made PG)
G FG-FGA PCT
1. Arthur Lee, STAN 35 164-185 .886
2. Ahlon Lewis, ASU 32 64-75 .853
3. Kris Johnson, UCLA 29 110-132 .833
4. Adam Spanich, USC 28 58-70 .829
5. Kris Weems, STAN 35 71-86 .826
6. A.D. Smith, ORE 27 70-86 .814
7. Terik Brown, ORE 27 68-86 .791
8. Jeremy Veal, ASU 32 122-155 .787
9. Miles Simon, ARIZ 35 144-185 .778
10. Bobby Lazor, ASU 32 129-166 .777
Assists
G AST AVG
1. Ahlon Lewis, ASU 32 294 9.19
2. Mike Bibby, ARIZ 35 199 5.69
3. Baron Davis, UCLA 32 161 5.03
4. Miles Simon, ARIZ 35 163 4.66
5. Arthur Lee, STAN 35 161 4.60
6. Jason Terry, ARIZ 35 149 4.26
7. Blake Pengelly, WSU 29 119 4.10
8. Toby Bailey, UCLA 33 135 4.09
9. Gary Johnson, USC 27 100 3.70
10. Kevin Augustine, USC 26 96 3.69
Blocked Shots
G BS AVG
1. Mike Batiste, ASU 32 51 1.59
2. Shannon Swillis, USC 27 41 1.52
3. Patrick Femerling, WASH 26 34 1.31
4. Todd MacCulloch, WASH 30 38 1.27
5. Bobby Lazor, ASU 32 39 1.22
6. Carlos Daniel, ASU 28 33 1.18
7. Tim Young, STAN 35 41 1.17
8. A.J. Bramlett, ARIZ 35 36 1.03
9. Todd Marshall, OSU 21 20 0.95
10. Francisco Elson, CAL 27 25 0.93
Steals
G ST AVG
1. Baron Davis, UCLA 32 77 2.41
2. Mike Bibby, UCLA 35 84 2.40
3. Thomas Kilgore, CAL 21 45 2.14
4. Gary Johnson, USC 27 57 2.11
5. Eddie House, ASU 32 64 2.00
6. Earl Watson, UCLA 33 64 1.94
7. Corey Benjamin, OSU 25 48 1.92
8. Jason Terry, ARIZ 35 61 1.74
9. Ahlo Lewis, ASU 32 55 1.72
10. Deaundra Tanner, OSU 30 49 1.63
All Pac-10 Basketball Team
Kris Weems, Stanford
Tim Young, Stanford
Toby Bailey, UCLA
Mike Bibby, Arizona
Carlos Daniel, Washington State
Michael Dickerson, Arizona
J.R. Henderson, UCLA
Todd MacCulloch, Washington
Miles Simon, Arizona
Jeremy Veal, Arizona State
Player of the Year
Mike Bibby, Arizona
Coach of the Year
Lute Olson, Arizona
Freshman of the Year
Baron Davis, UCLA
All Pac-10 Freshman Basketball Team
Jarron Collins, Stanford
Baron Davis, UCLA
Sean Lampley, California
Deaundra Tanner, OSU
Earl Watson, UCLA
All Academic Team
First Team
Carlos Daniel, Washington State, 3.51 gpa, History
Bobby Lazor, ASU, 3.61 gpa, Business Marketing
Todd MacCulloch, Wash., 3.13 gpa, Speech & Hearing Science
A.D. Smith, Ore., 3.50 gpa, Business Administration
Chris Thompson, Wash., Senior, 3.42 gpa, History
Second Team
Mark Madsen, Stanford, Sophomore, 3.20 gpa, Undeclared
Kamba Tshinoyi, Stanford, Senior, 3.12 gpa, Human Biology
Will Hutchens, WSU, Junior, 3.77 gpa, Crops/Soil Science
Leil Nelson, WSU, Junior, 3.81 gpa, Psychology
Blake Pengelly, WSU, Sophomore, 3.67 gpa, Undeclared
The Pacific-10 Conference
The Pacific-10 Conference continued to live up to its billing as the "Conference of Champions" in 1997-98. The league led the nation in NCAA team championships for the second consecutive year with eleven in 1997-98 and also laid claim to 45 individual titles. Six different Pac-10 members won at least one NCAA championship, with Stanford leading the nation with five (men's cross country, women's volleyball, men's swimming, women's swimming, men's tennis).
Conference members have now claimed an incredible 25 NCAA team crowns the past two seasons and 41 over the past four for an average of just over ten per academic year. The Pac-10 has led the nation in NCAA team championships 34 of the last 38 years and finished second in the other four seasons. The eleven championships in 1997-98 increased the Pac-10's all-time total to 293, far outdistancing the national runner-up Big Ten's 162 titles.
Pac-10 members have now won 232 NCAA men's team championships (far ahead of the 151 claimed by the runner-up Big Ten) and 61 women's crowns (far ahead of the Southeastern Conference, which is second with 41.
Pac-10/NCAA Tournament Facts
- Fifteen National titles (by five different schools, including Stanford in 1942).
- Two National titles in the last four years (UCLA in 1995, Arizona in 1997).
- Five different Pac-10 teams have been to the Sweet 16 the last two years.
- Four Pac-10 schools have participated in each of the last two Sweet 16 rounds, including Stanford in 1997 and 1998.
- Three different Pac-10 schools have reached the Final Four in four of the last five years (Arizona in 1994, UCLA in 1995, Arizona in 1997, Stanford in 1998).
Pac-10 All-Americans
- Fifteen conference players have earned All-America honors in the 1990's.
- Since 1990, three Pac-10 players have been tabbed National Player of the Year.
- Following two of the last three seasons, a Pac-10 freshmen was honored as National Freshman of the Year.
Pac-10 & the NBA
- The Pac-10 had more players selected (8) in the 1998 NBA draft than any other conference.
- A total of 25 Pac-10 players have been selected over the past four NBA drafts. Nine league schools have had at least one player drafted during that span.
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