Courtesy of Colorado State Athletics
FORT COLLINS – Isaiah Stevens has put together an All-America resume for the 2023-24 season helping him land on the Wooden Award Midseason Top 25 and Lute Olson watch list announced Wednesday.
The guard is averaging 17.4 points, 7.1 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game while shooting 52.9% from the field, 45.8% behind the arc and 80.6% from the free throw line. He has helped CSU to a 13-3 record including big non-conference wins over Creighton, Colorado, Boston College and Washington.
Stevens is the lone player in the nation to have multiple 15-plus points, 10-plus assist games this season with three and has recorded 15 & 8 in seven of the team’s 16 games this season.
He has three double-doubles on the year, all of the points-assists variety and scored 20-plus points six times. One of those double-doubles came when he set the program’s single-game record for assists with 14 and 22 points in a win over Wright State.
Stevens became CSU’s all-time leading scorer during non-conference play to go with already holding the program’s career assists record.
The Wooden Award watchlist will be paired down to 15 before the start of the NCAA Tournament in March. Both award winners will be announced at the Final Four.
Wooden Award Midseason Top 25
Isaiah Stevens, Colorado State
Max Abmas, Texas
Armondo Bacot, North Carolina
L.J. Cryer, Houston
Johnell Davis, Florida Atlantic
RJ Davis, North Carolina
Hunter Dickinson, Kansas
Zach Edy, Purdue
Kyle Filipowski, Duke
PJ Hall, Clemson
David Jones, Memphis
Dalton Knecht, Tennessee
Tyler Kolek, Marquette
Jaedon LeDee, San Diego State
Caleb Love, Arizona
Kevin McCullar, Jr., Kansas
Tristen Newton, Connecticut
Antonio Reeves, Kentucky
Baylor Scheierman, Creighton
Mark Sears, Alabama
Reed Sheppard, Kentucky
KJ Simpson, Colorado
Wade Taylor IV, Texas A&M
Tyson Walker, Michigan State
Ja’Kobe Walker, Baylor
Lute Olson Award Watch List
Isaiah Stevens, Colorado State
Johni Broome, Auburn
L.J. Cryer, Houston
RJ Davis, North Carolina
Hunter Dickinson, Kansas
Zach Edey, Purdue
Terrence Edwards, Jr., James Madison
Kyle Filipowski, Duke
Tyon Grant-Foster, Grand Canyon
PJ Hall, Clemson
Meechie Johnson, South Carolina
Xavier Johnson, Southern Illinois
David Jones, Memphis
Jadon LeDee, San Diego State
Ryan Kalkbrenner, Creighton
Dalton Knecht, Tennessee
Tyler Kolek, Marquette
Xaivian Lee, Princeton
Caleb Love, Arizona
Kevin McCullar, Kansas
Tristen Newton, Connecticut
Great Osobor, Utah State
Jahvon Quinerly, Memphis
Antonio Reeves, Kentucky
Baylor Scheierman, Creighton
Jamal Shead, Houston
AJ Storr, Wisconsin
Wade Taylor IV, Texas A&M
Ja’Kobe Walter, Baylor
Shahada Wells, McNeese