Purdue's Zach Edey again voted
Player of the Year
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[April 06, 2024]
Purdue center Zach Edey was named Associated Press Player of Year on
Friday, becoming the first back-to-back winner since Virginia
7-footer Ralph Sampson took the honor three straight years in the
early 1980s.
Edey, the fifth player to win the award in consecutive seasons, and
the Boilermakers are in Glendale, Ariz., playing for different
trophy -- college basketball's national championship -- with the
Final Four set to begin Saturday.
No. 1 seed Purdue will face No. 11 seed North Carolina State in the
semifinals.
Edey is averaging 30 points in the NCAA Tournament, which includes a
career-high 40 points with 16 rebounds to punch Purdue's ticket to
the Final Four on Sunday in a 72-66 victory over Tennessee.
Purdue suffered painful early-round losses in Edey's previous
seasons. The Boilermakers were on the wrong side of epic and
memorable upsets at the hands of Fairleigh Dickinson (2023) and
Saint Peter's (2022) before this year's breakthrough, a return to
the Final Four for the first time since 1980.
"When you're trying to separate yourself, you're really getting into
trivial things that don't matter, but they do matter if you follow
somebody and follow sports," Purdue coach Matt Painter said. "What
separates greatness is winning, ultimately. The people that win
more. The people that have more success when you look back."
Edey was National Player of the Year in 2023 and after entering the
draft process, announced his return for the 2023-24 season via
social media with three words: Run it back.
And did he ever.
With concentrated work on conditioning and expanding his shooting
range, Edey led the nation in scoring and is averaging 25 points
with 12.2 rebounds this season. Purdue has already placed his No. 15
jersey in the rafters at Mackey Arena alongside greats such as Glenn
Robinson and John Wooden.
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Mar 31, 2024; Detroit, MI, USA; Purdue Boilermakers center Zach Edey
(15) controls the bal in the first half against the Tennessee
Volunteers during the NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional Championship
at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-USA TODAY
Sports/File Photo
His next opponent is NC State, and Wolfpack coach
Kevin Keatts wasn't shy about confirming his team worries about
containing the imposing, 7-4, 320-pound Edey.
"If you ask me who keeps you up at night right now, it's Zach Edey,"
Keatts said. "He's playing at a high level. He can score the ball.
We got to get him out of that lane. He lives in that lane. He's
really talented. The way he's become a lot better is he passes the
ball a lot."
By improving his passing out of the post, Edey helped Purdue to a
40.61 3-point percentage in a dramatic improvement from a ranking in
the 300s last season. The Boilermakers give opponents what Gonzaga
coach Mark Few described as a no-win scenario on defense.
"When those guards shoot it like that, it's pick your poison," Few
said after losing to Purdue in the regional semifinals last week.
"It was -- they shot it great from three, and then in the second
half, we, I think, shut down that area pretty good. Then Edey was
just a load. It's a nice entity to have, just pitch it into him. If
you play him one-on-one, he's either going to get fouled or score."
--Field Level Media
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