| 1957 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans | |
|---|---|
Members of the 1957 Consensus All-America first team. Clockwise from upper left: Hundley, Krebs, Tyra, Rosenbluth (not pictured: Chamberlain, Forte).  | |
| Awarded for | 1956–57 NCAA University Division men's basketball season | 
The consensus 1957 College Basketball All-American team, as determined by aggregating the results of six major All-American teams.[1] To earn 'consensus' status, a player must win honors from a majority of the following teams: the Associated Press, the USBWA, The United Press International, the National Association of Basketball Coaches, the Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and the International News Service.
1957 Consensus All-America team
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Wilt Chamberlain | C | Sophomore | Kansas | 
| Chet Forte | G | Senior | Columbia | 
| Rod Hundley | G/F | Senior | West Virginia | 
| Jim Krebs | F/C | Senior | Southern Methodist | 
| Lennie Rosenbluth | F | Senior | North Carolina | 
| Charlie Tyra | C | Senior | Louisville | 
| Player | Position | Class | Team | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Elgin Baylor | F | Sophomore | Seattle | 
| Frank Howard | F | Junior | Ohio State | 
| Guy Rodgers | G | Junior | Temple | 
| Gary Thompson | G | Senior | Iowa State | 
| Grady Wallace | F | Senior | South Carolina | 
Individual All-America teams
| All-America Team | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First team | Second team | Third team | ||||||
| Player | School | Player | School | Player | School | |||
| Associated Press[2] | Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | Jim Ashmore | Mississippi State | ||
| Chet Forte | Columbia | Frank Howard | Ohio State | Archie Dees | Indiana | |||
| Rod Hundley | West Virginia | Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | Bill Ebben | Detroit | |||
| Lennie Rosenbluth | North Carolina | Charlie Tyra | Louisville | Larry Friend | California | |||
| Gary Thompson | Iowa State | Grady Wallace | South Carolina | Guy Rodgers | Temple | |||
| USBWA/Look Magazine[3] | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | No second or third teams (10-man first team) | |||||
| Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | |||||||
| Chet Forte | Columbia | |||||||
| Frank Howard | Ohio State | |||||||
| Rod Hundley | West Virginia | |||||||
| Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | |||||||
| Guy Rodgers | Temple | |||||||
| Lennie Rosenbluth | North Carolina | |||||||
| Gary Thompson | Iowa State | |||||||
| Charlie Tyra | Louisville | |||||||
| NABC[4] | Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | Bruno Boin | Washington | ||
| Rod Hundley | West Virginia | George Bon Salle | Illinois | Archie Dees | Indiana | |||
| Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | Chet Forte | Columbia | Frank Howard | Ohio State | |||
| Lennie Rosenbluth | North Carolina | Guy Rodgers | Temple | Ron Kramer | Michigan | |||
| Charlie Tyra | Louisville | Gary Thompson | Iowa State | Dick O'Neal | Texas Christian | |||
| UPI[5] | Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | Jim Ashmore | Mississippi State | ||
| Chet Forte | Columbia | Joe Gibbon | Mississippi | Johnny Cox | Kentucky | |||
| Rod Hundley | West Virginia | Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | Archie Dees | Indiana | |||
| Lennie Rosenbluth | North Carolina | Gary Thompson | Iowa State | Frank Howard | Ohio State | |||
| Grady Wallace | South Carolina | Charlie Tyra | Louisville | Guy Rodgers | Temple | |||
| NEA | Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | No third team | |||
| Frank Howard | Ohio State | Chet Forte | Columbia | |||||
| Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | Rod Hundley | West Virginia | |||||
| Guy Rodgers | Temple | Jimmy Smith | Steubenville | |||||
| Charlie Tyra | Louisville | Bennie Swain | Texas Southern | |||||
| International News Service | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | Chet Forte | Columbia | No third team | |||
| Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | Rod Hundley | West Virginia | |||||
| Jim Krebs | Southern Methodist | Guy Rodgers | Temple | |||||
| Lennie Rosenbluth | North Carolina | Gary Thompson | Iowa State | |||||
| Grady Wallace | South Carolina | Charlie Tyra | Louisville | |||||
AP Honorable Mention:[6]
- Harold Alcorn, Saint Louis
 - Dick Banton, UCLA
 - Larry Beck, Washington State
 - Bruno Boin, Washington
 - Bill Bond, Stanford
 - Barney Cable, Bradley
 - Vinnie Cohen, Syracuse
 - Boo Ellis, Niagara
 - Dick Gaines, Seton Hall
 - Dave Gambee, Oregon State
 - Joe Gibbon, Mississippi
 - Johnny Green, Michigan State
 - Vernon Hatton, Kentucky
 - Don Hennon, Pittsburgh
 - Johnny Lee, Yale
 - Lee Marshall, Washington and Lee
 - Don Medsker, Iowa State
 - Mike Moran, Marquette
 - Jack Murdock, Wake Forest
 - Hank Nowak, Canisius
 - Jack Parr, Kansas State
 - Hub Reed, Oklahoma City
 - Dave Ricketts, Duquesne
 - Al Rochelle, Vanderbilt
 - Lloyd Sharrar, West Virginia
 - Doug Smart, Washington
 - Win Wilfong, Memphis State
 
See also
References
- ↑ NCAA Record Book - Award Winners p.137. Accessed 2009-05-05. 2009-05-04.
 - ↑ AP All-America Teams
 - ↑ "USBWA Men's All-Americans". Archived from the original on October 7, 2008. Retrieved May 5, 2009.
 - ↑ "NABC Division I All-America Teams". NABC. Archived from the original on April 10, 2022. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
 - ↑ 2005 NCAA Basketball's Finest - All-Americans (UPI, NEA & International News Service) Archived 2009-07-21 at WebCite p.208
 - ↑  "Two little men make AP All-America club". The Lawton Constitution. March 7, 1957. p. 23. Retrieved October 20, 2014 – via Newspapers.com. 

 
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