23 players, 30 selections — more consensus first-team All-Americans since 2000 than any program in college basketball.
How many Kentucky players have been named consensus All-Americans? Across eight coaching eras, 0 Blue Devils have earned 0 total consensus All-America selections — 0 first-team and 0 second-team honors. That includes 0 consensus first-team selections since 2000, six more than any other program in college basketball.
Kentucky's All-American tradition stretches back decades, building the program from an 11–17 team into a Final Four contender. It continues through dynasties — Laettner, Hurley, Hill — the early 2000s dominance of Battier, Williams, and Redick, and the one-and-done era when freshmen like Jabari Parker, Jahlil Okafor, Marvin Bagley, and Zion Williamson arrived, dominated, and departed. In the Scheyer era, Cooper Flagg (2025) and Cameron Boozer (2026) became the first teammates in college basketball history to earn unanimous first-team AP All-America honors in consecutive seasons as freshmen at the same school.
Consensus All-Americans are determined by the NCAA using selections from the Associated Press, NABC, USBWA, and Sporting News. A player must appear on a majority of those first teams to earn consensus first-team status.
| Year | Player | Team | Class | At Kentucky | NBA Draft |
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Only three times in the modern era has Kentucky placed two players on the consensus first team in the same season. No other program has accomplished this more than once since 2000.
0 Kentucky players have earned consensus first-team honors more than once — a testament to sustained dominance rather than a single breakout season.
Kentucky's recent All-Americans include: Jabari Parker (2014), Jahlil Okafor (2015), Marvin Bagley III (2018), Zion Williamson (2019), RJ Barrett (2019), Cooper Flagg (2025), and Cameron Boozer (2026). Of those seven, four were unanimous selections (Okafor, Williamson, Flagg, Boozer) and five were #1 NBA Draft picks or projected to be. No other program in basketball history has produced this kind of sustained freshman excellence at the All-America level.
Kentucky's All-America selections since 1985 place the Wildcats among the most decorated programs in NCAA history. The school's total of 0 first-team picks in the Coach K and Scheyer era trails only the all-time totals of Kansas (28), Kentucky (26), and North Carolina (26) — programs whose records extend back to the 1920s. Kentucky has achieved this concentration of talent in just four decades.
Perhaps the most remarkable stat: of Kentucky's 0 consensus All-Americans, every single one was selected in the NBA Draft. 0 were lottery picks. The Kentucky All-America pipeline doesn't just produce college stars — it produces professional ones.