2008–09 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}

{{Infobox sports season

| title =2008–09 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Season

| color =#072E67

| color text =#EFE3BB

| league =NCAA Division I

| sport =Basketball

| logo =

| pixels =125px

| caption =

| duration =December 17, 2008
through March 8, 2009

| no_of_teams =12

| attendance =

| TV =Raycom, ESPN

| draft =

| draft_link =

| top_pick =

| picked_by =

| season = Regular Season

| season_champs = North Carolina (13–3)

| season_champ_name= First place

| league_champs = Wake Forest (11–5)
Duke (11–5)

| league_champ_name= Runners-Up

| second_place =

| MVP = Ty Lawson – UNC

| MVP_link = ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year

| top_scorer = Tyler Hansbrough – UNC

| top_scorer_link =

| promote =

| promoted_from =

| relegate =

| relegate_to =

| playoffs =

| playoffs_link =

| conf1 =

| conf1_link =

| conf1_champ =

| conf1-runner-up =

| conf2 =

| conf2_link =

| conf2_champ =

| conf2-runner-up =

| playoffs_MVP =

| playoffs_MVP_link=

| finals = Tournament

| finals_link = 2009 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament

| finals_champ = Duke (17th)

| finals-runner-up = Florida State

| finals_MVP = Jon Scheyer

| finals_MVP_link = Most Valuable Player

| seasonslist =

| seasonslistnames =Basketball

| prevseason_link =

| prevseason_year =2007–08

| nextseason_link =

| nextseason_year =2009–10

}}

{{2008–09 ACC men's basketball standings}}

The 2008–09 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball season was the 56th season for the league. North Carolina won the regular season crown while Duke won the ACC Tournament championship. The season saw Tyler Hansbrough set conference records in points (finishing with 2,872 for his career) and free throws made (982), while Miami's Jack McClinton ended his career as the conference's all time three-point marksman (.440 3-point FG%).

Pre-season

On October 26, for the second-straight year North Carolina was the unanimous choice to finish first atop the Atlantic Coast Conference basketball race in voting by 40 media members at the league's annual Basketball Media Day. Duke was picked for second, while Wake Forest was voted third. Miami was fourth, followed by Clemson (fifth) and Virginia Tech (sixth).

Tyler Hansbrough was selected as pre-season ACC Player of the Year. Hansbrough averaged 22.6 points and 10.2 rebounds during the 2008–09 while earning first-team All-America honors for a third-straight year and consensus National Player of the Year honors. Wake Forest's Al-Farouq Aminu was the media's choice for the ACC pre-season Rookie of the Year.

Hansbrough and Boston College's Tyrese Rice were unanimous selections for the pre-season All-ACC team. Also named to the pre-season team were Miami's Jack McClinton, North Carolina's Ty Lawson and Gerald Henderson from Duke.

On November 13, the Los Angeles Athletic Club released their annual pre-season John R. Wooden Award watch list.{{cite web

|url=http://woodenaward.cstv.com/ot/0809-mens-candidates.html

|publisher=Wooden Award

|title=2008–2009 John R. Wooden Award Preseason Top 50 List

|accessdate=2009-03-07

|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090617225532/http://woodenaward.cstv.com/ot/0809-mens-candidates.html

|archivedate=2009-06-17

|url-status=dead

}} The list is composed of 50 student athletes who, based on 2007-08's individual performance and team records, are the early frontrunners for college basketball's most coveted trophy. These top 50 candidates are returning players. Transfers, freshmen, and medical red-shirts are not eligible for this preseason list, but will be evaluated and considered for both the Midseason Top 30 list and the National Ballot. The ACC was represented by Boston College's Tyrese Rice, Duke's Gerald Henderson and Kyle Singler, Miami's Jack McClinton, North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough, Wayne Ellington and Ty Lawson and Wake Forest's James Johnson. In the 2007–08 season, North Carolina's Hansbrough became the 12th ACC Player to earn Wooden National Player of the Year Award.{{cite web

|url=http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/111308aab.html

|work=Men's Basketball

|publisher=TheACC.com

|title=Eight ACC Players on Wooden Award Preseason List

|accessdate=2009-03-07

|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120307215107/http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/111308aab.html

|archivedate=2012-03-07

|url-status=dead

}}

Regular season

November

In November, nine ACC teams participated in eight regular season tournaments across the United States. Four ACC teams claimed championships.

class="wikitable"

! Name

DatesNum. teamsChampionship
2k Sports Classic

| Nov. 10–21

| {{center|16}}

| Duke 71 vs. Michigan 57

Charleston Classic

| Nov. 14–16

| {{center|8}}

| Clemson 76 vs. Temple 72

Maui Invitational

| Nov. 24–26

| {{center|8}}

| UNC 102 vs. Notre Dame 87

76 Classic

| Nov. 27–30

| {{center|8}}

| Wake Forest 87 vs. Baylor 74

On November 11, Duke's Mike Krzyzewski moved into fifth place on the NCAA's all-time win list with his 805th career victory, a 97–54 win over Georgia Southern. On November 16, Virginia's Sylven Landesberg has 28 points, eight rebounds and eight assists as the Cavaliers beat VMI 107- 97. Landesberg's 28 points tied the second-highest total by an ACC freshman in his college debut. On November 21, With Maryland's 89–74 overtime win over Vermont, Gary Williams became only the third coach in league history to reach 400 career victories while coaching in the ACC. On November 21, Virginia's Sylven Landesberg netted a game-high 22 points in the Cavaliers' 68–66 win over Radford and became only the second freshman in ACC history to score 20 points in each of his first three games. Georgia Tech's Kenny Anderson scored 20 or more points in each of his first six games as a freshman in 1989–90. On November 30, Ty Lawson had 22 points as No. 1 North Carolina beat UNC-Asheville 116–48. The 68-point win margin was the largest in the ACC since a 75-point Maryland win over North Texas State (132–57) on Dec. 23, 1998, and tied for the seventh largest margin ever in ACC history.


December

On Wednesday, December 3, The ACC won its 10th-straight ACC–Big Ten Challenge by winning six of the eleven matchups. The series was highlighted by the 98–63 victory of No. 1 North Carolina over No. 12 Michigan State at Ford Field in what was dubbed as "Basketbowl II". On December 23, Boston College's Corey Raji was a perfect 12-for-12 from the field and scored a career-high 26 points in a 99–61 win over Maine. Raji's performance tied him for the second-best single game performance in ACC history. UNC's Brad Daugherty holds the ACC single-game field proficiency mark making all 13 of his shots versus UCLA back on Nov. 24, 1985. On December 30, NC State sophomore Tracy Smith came off the bench to score a career-high 31 points in the Wolfpack's 88–68 win over visiting Towson. Smith's 31 points set a school record and tied for the third-highest point total by a non-starter in ACC history.


January

On January 3, Jeff Teague had a game-high 30 points and James Johnson adds 22 points and 15 rebounds as sixth ranked Wake Forest snapped the nation's longest home court winning streak at 53 with a 94–87 win at BYU before a crowd of 26,096. On January 19, 16–0 Wake Forest took over the No. 1 spot in the AP poll and became the second ACC team to be ranked No. 1 in both the writers and coaches' polls. With the Deacons assuming the top spot in his 46th game as a head coach, Dino Gaudio became the third-fastest ACC head coach to have his team voted #1. On January 26, 18–1 Duke became the third ACC team this season to be ranked No. 1 in the AP poll, marking the second time in ACC annals and the fourth time in AP poll history that three different teams from the same conference have been ranked No. 1 in the same season. On January 31, In only the second-ever meeting between brothers in an ACC game, the Aminu brothers (Alade and Al-Farouq) combine for 27 points and 24 rebounds as Georgia Tech upsets No. 4 Wake Forest 76–74 in Atlanta. Al-Farouq had 17 points, 11 rebounds and five steals for the Deacons while Alade had 10 points, 13 rebounds for the Jackets.


February

On February 5, midway through the 2009 college basketball season, the Los Angeles Athletic Club's John R. Wooden Award Committee selected the top 30 candidates for the John R. Wooden Award, the nation's most coveted college basketball honor. The list is composed of the players who will compete for this season's player of the year award, the midseason list is based on individual player performance and team records during the first half of the season. The ACC was represent by North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough, Ty Lawson, Duke's Gerald Henderson, Kyle Singler and Wake Forest's Jeff Teague. Teague was one of nine players who were selected for the midseason list who were not selected in the preseason.{{cite web

|url=http://woodenaward.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/020509aai.html

|publisher=Wooden Award

|title=John R. Wooden Award 2008–09 Midseason Top 30 Candidates Announced

|accessdate=2009-03-07

|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090315090138/http://woodenaward.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/020509aai.html

|archivedate=2009-03-15

|url-status=dead

}}

On February 15, Ty Lawson had 21 points and four assists and Wayne Ellington added 15 points and 10 rebounds in North Carolina's 69–65 win at Miami. With the win, UNC's Roy Williams' became the winningest coach through his first 200 games

at an ACC school. On February 21, Greivis Vasquez posted Maryland's first triple-double since 1987 as the Terps overcame a 16-point second-half deficit to beat No. 3 North Carolina 88–85 in overtime, ending the Tar Heels' 10-game win streak. In posting Maryland's third ever triple double, Vasquez had a career-high 35 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists. Vasquez's 35 points set a record for the most ever by an ACC player recording a triple-double.

On February 22, In North Carolina's 104–74 win over Georgia Tech, the Tar Heels' Tyler Hansbrough made all eight of his free throws and became the NCAA career leader in free throws made with 907. Hansbrough broke Wake Forest's Dickie Hemric's record set in 1955 with his 906th free throw with 14:54 to play in the second half.


March

On March 7, Miami's Jack McClinton was a perfect 16-for-16 from the free throw line and scored a game-high 24 points as

the Hurricanes overcame a nine-point halftime deficit en route to a 72–64 win over visiting NC State. McClinton's 16-for-16 effort tied for the fourth-best single-game mark in league history.

Rankings

class="wikitable" style="white-space:nowrap;font-size:95%;"
AP Poll{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/rankings |title=2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Rankings |access-date=2009-02-03 |date=2009-02-02 |publisher=ESPN Internet Ventures |work=ESPN.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090207184416/http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/rankings |archive-date=7 February 2009 |url-status=live }}Pre123456789101112131415161718Final
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! align="left"|Boston College

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 17

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | RV

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style="text-align:center;"

! Clemson

| style="background:#FFF;" | RV

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 25

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 22

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 12

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 18

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 17

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 24

| style="background:#FFF;" |

style="text-align:center;"

! Duke

| style="background:#FFF;" | 8

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 10

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 7

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 4

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 7

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| style="background:#FFF;" | 7

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 9

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 6

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! Florida State

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | RV

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 25

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 22

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 16

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! Georgia Tech

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | RV

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! Maryland

| style="background:#FFF;" |

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | RV

| style="background:#FFF;" | RV

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! Miami

| style="background:#FFF;" | 17

| style="background:#FFF;" | 17

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 22

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 21

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | RV

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! North Carolina

| style="background:#FFF;" | 1

| style="background:#FFF;" | 1

| style="background:#FFF;" | 1

| style="background:#FFF;" | 1

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| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 5

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 3

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 2

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 1

| style="background:#FFBBBB;" | 2

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! NC State

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! Virginia

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! Virginia Tech

| style="background:#FFF;" | RV

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! Wake Forest

| style="background:#FFF;" | 24

| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 20

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| style="background:#bbffbb;" | 11

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Statistics

= Individual =

{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-1-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Scoring}}

Name

!School

!PPG

Toney DouglasFSU21.5
Tyler HansbroughUNC20.7
Jack McClintonMiami19.3
A. D. VassalloVT19.1
Jeff TeagueWF18.8

{{Col-2-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Rebounding}}

Name

!School

!RPG

Trevor BookerClem.9.7
Gani LawalGT9.5
James JohnsonWF8.5
Jeff AllenVT8.4
Al-Farouq AminuWF8.2

{{Col-3-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Assists}}

Name

!School

!APG

Ty LawsonUNC6.6
Tyrese RiceBC5.3
Greivis VasquezMD5.0
Iman ShumpertGT5.0
Malcolm DelaneyVT4.5

{{Col-4-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Steals}}

Name

!School

!SPG

Ty LawsonUNC2.1
Iman ShumpertGT2.1
Jeff TeagueWF1.9
Jeff AllenVT1.8
Toney DouglasFSU1.8

{{Col-end}}


{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-1-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Blocks}}

Name

!School

!BPG

Solomon AlabiFSU2.1
Trevor BookerClem.2.0
Alade AminuGT1.8
Ed DavisUNC1.7
Assane SeneUVa1.6

{{Col-3-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Field Goals}}

Name

!School

!FG%

Trevor BookerClem..571
Gani LawalGT.556
James JohnsonWF.542
Ty LawsonUNC.532
Alade AminuGT.522

{{Col-2-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| 3-Pt Field Goals}}

Name

!School

!3FG%

Jack McClintonMiami.453
Terrence OglesbyClem..388
Lewis ClinchGT.338

{{Col-3-of-4}}

class="wikitable"

|colspan=3|{{center| Free Throws}}

Name

!School

!FT%

Jack McClintonMiami.885
Malcolm DelaneyVT.869
Greivis VasquezMD.867
Tyrese RiceBC.856
Uche EchefuFSU.848

{{Col-end}}

= Teams =

class="wikitable sortable" width=80% style="font-size: 95%; text-align:center"

!width="12%"|Team

!width="3%"|G

!width="5%"|PF

!width="5%"|PA

!width="5%"|PFPG

!width="5%"|PAPG

!width="5%"|Margin

!width="5%"|FG

!width="5%"|FGA

!width="5%"|FG%

!width="5%"|3FG

!width="5%"|3FGA

!width="5%"|3FG%

!width="5%"|FT

!width="5%"|FTA

!width="5%"|FT%

!width="5%"|RebF

!width="5%"|RebA

!width="5%"|Margin

style="text-align:left"|Boston College342528239774.470.5+3.98852000.443217649.334541733.73812591167+2.7
style="text-align:left"|Clemson322507217778.368.0+10.39121971.463256684.374427621.68811891127+1.9
style="text-align:left"|Duke362813236278.165.6+12.59552126.449262739.355641880.72813141198+3.2
style="text-align:left"|Florida State352392227168.364.9+3.58201886.435216631.342536739.72512531221+0.9
style="text-align:left"|Georgia Tech312208221671.271.5−0.38151868.436159492.323419665.63012111143+2.2
style="text-align:left"|Maryland352512241971.869.1+2.79242179.424201604.333463611.75812741333−1.7
style="text-align:left"|Miami322325212372.766.3+6.37961865.427251682.368482706.68312721107+5.2
style="text-align:left"|NC State302189208773.069.6+3.47731626.475202538.375441615.7171075973+3.4
style="text-align:left"|North Carolina383413273589.872.0+17.812052509.480264682.387739983.75215941353+6.3
style="text-align:left"|Virginia281960202970.072.5−2.57011682.417156494.316402543.7401030990+1.4
style="text-align:left"|Virginia Tech342470240572.670.7+1.98451934.437207615.337573791.72412571153+3.1
style="text-align:left"|Wake Forest312510219381.070.7+10.29061849.490126394.320572804.71112621080+5.9

Postseason

= ACC Tournament =

{{Main|2009 ACC men's basketball tournament}}

{{4TeamBracket | RD1=Semifinals | RD2=Championship

| RD1-seed1=  1  

| RD1-team1=North Carolina (13–3)

| RD1-score1=70

| RD1-seed2= 4

| RD1-team2=Florida State (10–6)

| RD1-score2=73

| RD1-seed3= 7

| RD1-team3=Maryland (7–9)

| RD1-score3=61

| RD1-seed4= 3

| RD1-team4=Duke (11–5)

| RD1-score4=67

| RD2-seed1=  4  

| RD2-team1=Florida State

| RD2-score1=69

| RD2-seed2= 3

| RD2-team2=Duke

| RD2-score2=79

}}

The third-seeded Duke Blue Devils defeated fourth-seeded Florida State 79–69 in the title ACC Championship game on Sunday, March 15, giving Duke its ninth ACC crown in 12 years. Duke also tied North Carolina for most tournament championships with 17. Duke's Jon Scheyer was named the tournament MVP.

= NCAA Tournament =

{{Main|2009 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament}}

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%"
align="left"

!Team

!Seed

!Round

!Date

!Time

!Opponent#

!Site

!Result

!Attendance

rowspan=6|North Carolina (6–0)

|rowspan=6|{{center|#1}}

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|First

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Thur, Mar. 19

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|2:50 pm

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|vs. No. 16 Radford

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Greensboro ColiseumGreensboro, NC

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|W 101–58

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|{{center|20,226}}

bgcolor="#ddffdd"SecondSat, Mar. 215:45 pmvs. No. 8 LSUGreensboro ColiseumGreensboro, NCW 84–70{{center|22,479}}
bgcolor="#ddffdd"Sweet 16Fri, Mar. 279:57 pmvs. No. 4 Gonzaga

|FedExForumMemphis, TN

W 98–77{{center| 17,103}}
bgcolor="#ddffdd"Elite EightSun, Mar. 295:05 pmvs. No. 2 OklahomaFedExForumMemphis, TNW 72–60{{center|17,025}}
bgcolor="#ddffdd"Final FourSat, Apr. 48:47 pmvs. No. 3 VillanovaFord FieldDetroit, MIW 83–69{{center| 72,456}}
bgcolor="#ddffdd"FinalsMon, Apr. 69:21 pmvs. No. 3 Michigan StateFord FieldDetroit, MIW 89–72{{center| 72,922}}
rowspan=3|Duke (2–1)

|rowspan=3|{{center|#2}}

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|First

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Thur, Mar. 19

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|9:40 pm

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|vs. No. 15 Binghamton

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Greensboro ColiseumGreensboro, NC

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|W 86–62

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|{{center|20,001}}

bgcolor="#ddffdd"SecondSat, Mar. 218:15 pmvs. No. 7 TexasGreensboro ColiseumGreensboro, NCW 74–69{{center| 22,479}}
bgcolor="#ffdddd"Sweet 16Thur, Mar. 269:57 pmvs No. 3 VillanovaTD Banknorth GardenBostonL 54–77{{center| 18,831}}
|Wake Forest (0–1){{center|#4}}

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|First

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Fri, Mar. 20

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|9:40 pm

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|vs. No. 13 Cleveland State

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|American Airlines ArenaMiami, FL

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|L 69–84

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|{{center|8,990}}

|Florida State (0–1){{center|#5}}

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|First

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Fri, Mar. 20

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|9:55 pm

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|vs. No. 12 Wisconsin

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Taco Bell ArenaBoise, ID

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|L 59–61OT

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|{{center|12,194}}

|Boston College (0–1){{center|#7}}

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|First

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Fri, Mar. 20

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|7:20 pm

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|vs. No. 10 USC

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Hubert H. Humphrey MetrodomeMinneapolis, MN

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|L 55–72

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|{{center|12,814}}

|Clemson (0–1){{center|#7}}

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|First

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Thur, Mar. 19

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|7:10 pm

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|vs. No. 10 Michigan

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|Sprint CenterKansas City, MO

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|L 59–62

|bgcolor="#ffdddd"|{{center|17,398}}

rowspan=2|Maryland (1–1)

|rowspan=2|{{center|#10}}

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|First

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Thur, Mar. 19

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|2:55 pm

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|vs. No. 7 California

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Sprint CenterKansas City, MO

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|W 84–71

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|{{center|17,319}}

bgcolor="#ffdddd"SecondSat, Mar. 213:20 pmvs. No. 2 MemphisSprint CenterKansas City, MOL 70–89{{center|18,247}}
colspan=9|# indicates seedings. All times are Eastern

Ty Lawson was the South regional MVP and he was joined on the All-regional team by teammates Danny Green and Tyler Hansbrough.{{cite web|url=http://www.memphisflyer.com/memphis/Content?oid=oid%3A57976|title=NCAA South Regional: North Carolina 72, Oklahoma 60|accessdate=2009-03-31|date=2009-03-29|work=Memphis Flyer|author=Murtaugh, Frank}}

The first-seeded North Carolina Tarheels defeated third-seeded Michigan State 89–72 in the title NCAA Championship game on Monday, April 6, giving North Carolina its second NCAA crown in four years. It was North Carolina's fifth national championship. North Carolina's Wayne Ellington was named the Final Four's Most Outstanding Player.

= National Invitation Tournament =

{{Main|2009 National Invitation Tournament}}

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%"
align="left"

!Team

!Seed

!Round

!Date

!Time

!Opponent#

!Site

!TV

!Result

!Attendance

rowspan=2|Virginia Tech (1–1)

|rowspan=2|{{center|#2}}

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|First

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Wed, Mar. 18

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|7:00 pm

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|#7 Duquesne

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Cassell ColiseumBlacksburg, VA

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|ESPNU

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|W 116–1082OT

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|{{center|5,878}}

bgcolor="#ffdddd"SecondSat, Mar. 2111:00 am#3 BaylorCassell Coliseum • Blacksburg, VAESPNL 66–84{{center| 6,891}}
rowspan=2|Miami (1–1)

|rowspan=2|{{center|#4}}

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|First

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Wed, Mar. 18

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|7:00 pm

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|@ No. 5 Providence

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|Dunkin' Donuts CenterProvidence, RI

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|ESPN2

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|W 78–66

|bgcolor="#ddffdd"|{{center|5,645}}

bgcolor="#ffdddd"SecondFri, Mar. 207:00 pm@ No. 1 FloridaStephen C. O'Connell CenterGainesville, FLESPNUL 60–74{{center|6,525}}
colspan=10|# Rankings indicate seedings. All times are Eastern

Conference awards and honors

= Weekly awards =

ACC Players of the Week

Throughout the conference season, the ACC offices name a player and rookie of the week. The MVP of the ACC tournament is the automatic winner of the final ACC player of the week of each season.

class="wikitable" border="1"
Week

! Player of the week

! Rookie of the week

rowspan=2 valign=middle |November 17

| Kyle Singler, Duke

| rowspan=2 colspan=3 align=left|Sylven Landesberg, UVA

Trevor Booker, Clem.
November 24

| Greivis Vasquez, MD

| Sylven Landesberg, UVA

December 1

| Ty Lawson, UNC

| Al-Farouq Aminu, WF

December 8

| Greivis Vasquez, MD

| Iman Shumpert, GT

December 15

| Tyler Hansbrough, UNC

| Chris Singleton, FSU

December 22

| K. C. Rivers, Clem.

| Sylven Landesberg, UVA

December 29

| Toney Douglas, FSU

| Sylven Landesberg, UVA

January 5

| Tyrese Rice, BC

| Al-Farouq Aminu, WF

January 12

| Jeff Teague, WF

| Sylven Landesberg, UVA

January 19

| Jeff Teague, WF

| Al-Farouq Aminu, WF

January 26

| Malcolm Delaney, VT

| Reggie Jackson, BC

rowspan=2 valign=middle | February 2

| K. C. Rivers, Clem.

| rowspan=2 colspan=3 align=left|Al-Farouq Aminu, WF

Gani Lawal, GT
February 9

| Jack McClinton, Mia.

| Solomon Alabi, FSU

February 16

| Ty Lawson, UNC

| Sylven Landesberg, UVA

February 23

| Greivis Vasquez, MD

| Elliot Williams, Duke

March 2

| Gerald Henderson, Duke

| Solomon Alabi, FSU

March 9

| Toney Douglas, FSU

| Al-Farouq Aminu, WF

March 16

| Jon Scheyer, Duke

| None Selected

= Season awards =

Player of the Year

{{See also|ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year}}

Rookie of the Year

Coach of the Year

Defensive Player of the Year

All-Atlantic Coast Conference

{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-1-of-3}}First Team

1 – Denotes unanimous selection

{{Col-2-of-3}}Second Team

{{Col-3-of-3}}Third Team

{{Col-end}}

Honorable Mention: Wayne Ellington – North Carolina, K.C. Rivers – Clemson, Sylven Landesberg – Virginia

All-ACC Freshman team

1 – Denotes unanimous selection

Honorable Mention: Chris Singleton – Florida State

All-ACC Defensive team

Honorable Mention: Ty Lawson – North Carolina, Gani Lawal – Georgia Tech, Courtney Fells – NC State, Gerald Henderson – Duke

All-ACC Academic team

To be eligible for consideration, a student-athlete must have earned a 3.00 grade point average for the previous semester and maintained a 3.00 cumulative average during his academic career. Four players – McClinton, Paulus, Duke's Brian Zoubek and Virginia's Jerome Meyinsse – are repeaters from previous league all-academic teams. McClinton and Paulus were named to the team for the third time in their careers, while Zoubek and Meyinsse are two-time selections.{{cite web

| url=http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/030609aaa.html

| work=Men's Basketball

| publisher=TheACC.com

| title=Miami's Jack McClinton and Duke's Greg Paulus Headline the 2009 All-Atlantic Coast Conference Academic Men's Basketball Team

| accessdate=2009-03-06

| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120307215103/http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/030609aaa.html

| archive-date=2012-03-07

| url-status=dead

}}

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%"

! Name

SchoolYearHometownMajor
Jack McClinton

| Miami

| SR

| Baltimore, MD

| Sport Administration

Jerome Meyinsse

| UVa

| JR

| Baton Rouge, LA

| Economics

Greg Paulus

| Duke

| SR

| Syracuse, NY

| Political Science

Tanner Smith

| Clemson

| FR

| Alpharetta, GA

| Pre-Business

Tunji Soroye

| UVa

| SR

| Dugbe Ibadan, Nigeria

| Education

Johnny Thomas

| NC State

| 15pxFR

| Morehead City, NC

| Sport Management

Tyler Zeller

| North Carolina

| FR

| Washington, IN

| Business Administration

Brian Zoubek

| Duke

| JR

| Haddonfield, NJ

| History

National awards and honors

= NABC =

On March 5, the National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division I All-District teams, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, 240 student-athletes, from 24 districts were chosen. The selection on this list are then eligible for the State Farm Coaches' Division I All-America teams to be announced at the 2009 NABC Convention in Detroit. The following list represents the ACC players chosen to the list. All ACC schools are within District 2.{{cite web

|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/nabc/genrel/auto_pdf/D1all-district09.pdf

|publisher=National Association of Basketball Coaches

|title=National Association of Basketball Coaches Announces 2009 Division I All-District Teams

|accessdate=2009-03-05

|author=steven

|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090325105247/http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/nabc/genrel/auto_pdf/D1all-district09.pdf

|archivedate=2009-03-25

|url-status=live

}}


{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-1-of-2}}

First Team

{{Col-2-of-2}}Second Team

{{Col-end}}

= USBWA =

On March 10, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association released its 2008–09 Men's All-District Teams, based on voting from its national membership. There are nine regions from coast to coast and a player and coach of the year are selected in each. The following is each ACC player selected within their respective regions.{{cite web

|url=http://www.sportswriters.net/usbwa/news/2009/alldistrict090310.html

|publisher=U.S. Basketball Writers Association

|title=USBWA NAMES 2008–09 MEN'S ALL-DISTRICT TEAMS

|accessdate=2009-03-10

|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090512140425/http://www.sportswriters.net/usbwa/news/2009/alldistrict090310.html

|archivedate=2009-05-12

|url-status=live

}}

{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-1-of-3}}District I (ME, VT, NH, RI, MA, CT)

All-District Team

{{Col-2-of-3}}District III (VA, NC, SC, MD)

Player of the Year

Coach of the Year

All-District Team

{{Col-3-of-3}}District IV (KY, TN MS, AL, GA, FL)

All-District Team

{{Col-end}}

= CoSIDA =

On February 5, 2009, the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) and ESPN The Magazine selected their Academic All-Americans from throughout college basketball. To be nominated, a student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with at least a 3.30 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) at his/her current institution. Nominated athletes must have participated in at least 50 percent of the team's games at the position listed on the nomination form (where applicable). No student-athlete is eligible until he has completed one full calendar year at his current institution and has reached sophomore athletic eligibility. In the cases of transfers, graduate students and two-year college graduates, the student-athlete must have completed one full calendar year at the nominating institution to be eligible. Nominees in graduate school must have a cumulative GPA of 3.30 or better both as an undergrad and in grad school. The ACC had two players selected from District III as first-team Academic All-District selections: Greg Paulus and Brian Zoubek, both from Duke.{{cite web|url=http://www.cosida.com/documents/2009/2/5/09mensbasketball.pdf |title=2009 Academic All-District Men's Basketball Teams |accessdate=2009-03-27 |date=2009-02-05 |work=ESPN The Magazine |author=lanke |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090219055051/http://cosida.com/documents/2009/2/5/09mensbasketball.pdf |archivedate=2009-02-19 |url-status=live }} Greg Paulus was also selected overall by the CoSIDA as a third-team Academic All-American.{{cite web|url=http://www.cosida.com/documents/2009/2/25/2008-09MBBAAATeams.pdf|title=Brett Winkelman of North Dakota State, MIT's Jimmy Bartolotta Lead ESPN The Magazine's Academic All America Men's Basketball Teams|accessdate=2009-03-27|date=2009-02-25|work=ESPN The Magazine|author=O'Connell, Dan and Geoff Hassard}}

= All-American =

{{Main|2009 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans}}

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%"

!Colspan=2|Consensus All-Americans

First Team

!Second Team

Tyler Hansbrough – North Carolina

|Ty Lawson – North Carolina
Jeff Teague – Wake Forest

To earn "consensus" status, a player must win honors from a majority of the following teams: the

Associated Press, the USBWA, The Sporting News and the National Association of Basketball Coaches.

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%"

!Associated Press{{cite news|url=https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=4027698 |title=Griffin, Hansbrough lead AP first team |author=Associated Press |publisher=ESPN.com |date=2009-03-30 |access-date=2009-03-30| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090331123836/http://sports.espn.go.com/ncb/news/story?id=4027698| archive-date= 31 March 2009 | url-status= live}}{{cite web|url=http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/story/11569784 |title=2009 AP All-America teams |accessdate=2009-04-01 |publisher=CBS Interactive |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121010062208/http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/story/11569784 |archivedate=2012-10-10 |url-status=dead }}

!NABC

!Sporting News[http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=526662 Sporting News 2008–09 College Basketball All-Americans] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090314074333/http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=526662 |date=March 14, 2009 }}

!USBWA{{cite web |url=http://www.kansascity.com/news/breaking_news/story/1089222.html |title=KU's Collins is second-team All-American |first=Blair |last=Kerkhoff |work=KansasCity.com |date=March 16, 2009 |accessdate=April 28, 2022 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090321234815/http://www.kansascity.com/news/breaking_news/story/1089222.html |archive-date=March 21, 2009}}

colspan=4| First Team
Tyler Hansbrough – North Carolina

|Tyler Hansbrough – North Carolina

|Tyler Hansbrough – North Carolina

|Tyler Hansbrough – North Carolina

colspan=4|Second Team
valign="top"|Ty Lawson – North Carolina

|Ty Lawson – North Carolina
Jeff Teague – Wake Forest

|Ty Lawson – North Carolina
Jeff Teague – Wake Forest

|valign="top"|Jeff Teague – Wake Forest

colspan=4|Third Team
Toney Douglas – Florida State
Gerald Henderson – Duke

|valign="top"|Gerald Henderson – Duke

|valign="top"|Toney Douglas – Florida State

|

colspan=4|Honorable Mention
Tyrese Rice – Boston College
Kyle Singler – Duke
Jeff Teague – Wake Forest

|

|

|

References

{{reflist|2}}

{{Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball navbox}}

{{2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball conference season navbox}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:2008-09 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Season}}