Jul 20, 2012

Stew's top 20: No. 6 - Gary Wilkinson

As crucial as guys like Jared Quayle, Tai Wesley, Tyler Newbold and Pooh Williams were in filling the shoes of Jaycee Carroll and Kris Clark after the 2008 season, they were all second-fiddle at best. When it came to replacing the production of the 2008 WAC Player of the Year and USU's all-time leading scorer, Gary Wilkinson was the guy to step up and say, "Don't worry guys. I got this!"

To put plainly, Wilkinson took the reigns of Utah State basketball after losing one of its best players ever and led the program to arguably its best season of all time. And he did it all by being a dominant scorer from both in the post and out to mid-range, while shooting high percentages from the field, as well as an excellent rebounder.

But what makes Wilkinson so great was his leadership. Straight-up, there has been no better team-leader to play for Stew Morrill than the leader that Gary Wilkinson was. You could see it in every aspect of him from his persona, his attitude, his play and all the way to how he constantly was rallying the team back together on the court.

Coming to USU after earning junior college all-American honors at Salt Lake Community College, Wilkinson had a fantastic first season in Logan, averaging 13.3 points and seven rebounds per game. And all of that was despite battling through a broken thumb early in the season. From the Gossner's tournament through the end of the year, Wilkinson scored in double-figures in all but two games, racking up six double-doubles in the process with his rebounding continually improving.

Being the only returning all-WAC member going into the 2008-09 season after earning second-team all-WAC as a junior, Wilkinson was voted by the media as the WAC's preseason Player of the Year. From there, it was straight domination.

The 2009 Aggies made it back to the top 25 for the first time since 2004, tied a school-record with a 19-game winning streak, won just the second outright conference title under Morrill at USU and won the WAC Tournament title with a dominating display against Nevada on their home court in the championship game. Wilkinson was by far the go-to guy on that team, averaging 17.1 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. When the postseason all-WAC honors rolled around, Wilkinson was an absolute no-brainer pick for Player of the Year, more so than even Carroll was the previous season.

While his scoring numbers were just a bit below Desmond Penigar's for their respective careers, Wilkinson still gets this nod for the best JUCO transfer to play for Stew. With an incredible senior season, a school-record 30 wins, Player of the Year honors and the best leadership of any Stew guy, Wilkinson was about as good a player as you'll ever find.

And topping it all off is the fact that Wilkinson never once lost a game in The Spectrum! Who else can claim that?

2 comments:

  1. Gary is by far my favorite Aggie. He showed amazing leadership skills to back up his game skills and all that with pretty much no high school ball experience. Over all when my byu allum inlaws are still drooling over the jimmer all over their face I proudly show my wife clips of Wilkinson laying the smack down on the WAC.

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  2. Thank you Faf for recognizing my husband & doing it in such a eloquent manner. Not going to lie. I thought he might make the top 5, but as a proud wife I am honored that he would make it on the list at all! Keep up the great work. If we had a list of super fans for the Morrill era, you would unquestionably be at the top. Thank you for your hard work & for recognizing others for theirs!
    Xxx Jess Wilkinson

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