Congratulations to Jimmy Boeheim for making First Team Academic
All American. Boeheim is only the second Orange men’s basketball player to earn
first team honors, and the 8th to receive any Academic All American recognition.
The ability for an Orange player to make Academic All American
is far rarer than making All American status
based on playing accomplishments.
Consider that sixteen Orange players have made the 1st, 2nd,
or 3rd team AP All American, whereas only eight have made the
Academic All American.
Rick Dean was the first Academic All American, earning 2nd
team status his senior year. Dean would
be a decorated Vietnam veteran, an FBI agent, and then a Methodist Minister.
George Hicker was a third team Academic All American in 1968.
Hicker became a successful real estate salesman and later the president of
Cardinal Industrial.
Bill Smith was a second team Academic All American in
1971. He would have a brief NBA career,
before a lengthy career at Smith Barney.
Dennis DuVal was a second team Academic All American in
1973. He would have a brief NBA career,
before moving on to a career as a police officer in Syracuse. His career would
culminate with him being the Syracuse Police Chief from 2001-2004.
Hal Cohen was a second team Academic All American in
1979. He continued onto medical school following
graduating from Syracuse, and would be a respected radiologist in the Syracuse
area for over three decades.
Danny Schayes was the only other first team Academic All
American for Syracuse, achieving that distinction in 1981. Schayes would play 18 seasons in the NBA for
seven different franchises.
Craig Forth is the only Orange player to earn the distinction
twice. The first time he was third team in 2004, and then he earned it again
the next year rising to the second team. Forth became a teacher, and then later
the principal of Mechanicsville High School in 2016.
Jimmy Boeheim graduated from Cornell in 2021, and came to
Syracuse as a graduate student for the 2021-2022 season. He would earn first
team Academic All American status.