;Notes •
Bold denotes Boys' Players of the Year, respectively, and ‡ denotes high school juniors. • The "Hometown" column should contain the player's actual hometown, which is not always the location of the player's high school.
1983 Boys' team Coach of the Year:
Bob Wade (
Dunbar High School,
Baltimore) ;First Team
1984 Boys' team Coach of the Year:
Morgan Wootten (
DeMatha Catholic High School,
Hyattsville, Maryland) ;First Team
1985 Boys' team Coach of the Year: John Wood (
Spingarn High School, Washington, D.C.) ;First Team
1986 Boys' team Coach of the Year: Stu Vetter (
Flint Hill Prep,
Oakton, Virginia) ;First Team
1987 Boys' team Coach of the Year: Stu Vetter (
Flint Hill Prep,
Oakton, Virginia) ;First Team
1988 Boys' team Coach of the Year: John Sarandrea (
St. Nicholas of Tolentine,
Bronx, New York) ;First Team • Chris Jackson changed his name to
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf in 1993, two years after his conversion to Islam.
1989 Boys' team 1st team:
Kenny Anderson,
Doug Edwards,
Allan Houston,
Bobby Hurley,
Jim Jackson 1991 Boys' team 1st team:
Alan Henderson,
Juwan Howard,
Glenn Robinson,
David Vaughn,
Chris Webber 1999 Boys' team 1st team:
LaVell Blanchard,
Donnell Harvey,
Jay Williams,
Joseph Forte,
DerMarr Johnson. 2nd team:
Keith Bogans,
Jason Kapono,
Brett Nelson,
Jason Richardson,
Leon Smith 3rd team:
Carlos Boozer,
Casey Jacobsen,
Casey Sanders,
Kenny Satterfield,
Damien Wilkins 2000 Boys' team 1st team:
Eddie Griffin,
Darius Miles,
Zach Randolph,
Marcus Taylor,
Gerald Wallace 2001 Boys' team 1st team:
Kwame Brown,
Eddy Curry,
LeBron James,
Kelvin Torbert,
Dajuan Wagner ;First Team ;Second Team ;Third Team
2003 Boys' team ;1st team:
LeBron James,
Brian Butch,
Luol Deng,
Ndudi Ebi,
Mustafa Shakur ;Coach of the Year: Dru Joyce II ;Coach of the Year: Steve Smith ;Coach of the Year: Dan Bazzani ;First Team ;Second Team ;Third Team • Austin ended his college basketball career in 2014 after being diagnosed with
Marfan syndrome. After receiving medical clearance to return to play in late 2016, he began playing professionally overseas in 2017.
2013 Boys' team Coach of the year: Kevin Boyle, Montverde (Florida) Academy ;First team ;Second team ;Third team
2014 Boys' team Coach of the year: Sharman White, Miller Grove, Lithonia, Ga. ;First team • Mudiay chose to sign with the
Guangdong Southern Tigers of the
Chinese Basketball Association instead of accepting a scholarship offer from
SMU. He was drafted after one season in China. ;Second team ;Third team
2015 Boys' team Coach of the year: Melvin Randall, Blanche Ely, Pompano Beach, Florida ;First team ;Third team
2016 Boys' team Coach of the year: Steve Baik, Chino Hills, California ;First team ;Second team ;Third team
2017 Boys' team Coach of the year: Jack Doss, Mae Jemison, Huntsville, Alabama ;First team ;Second team • Bowen signed to play with
Louisville, but was suspended before what would have been his freshman season because of an
FBI investigation that raised serious questions about his NCAA eligibility, and never played for the school. He enrolled at South Carolina in January 2018, but never played for that school due to NCAA transfer rules. In a later phase of the FBI investigation,
further eligibility questions arose, and he declared for the 2018 draft without ever playing in college. ;Third team ==See also==