Markus Burton Named Second Team All-ACC

burton-2ndteamacc

CHARLOTTE  Notre Dame sophomore guard Markus Burton, who is the second-leading scorer in the country, plus the top scorer in the ACC, has been named to the All-ACC Second Team. A step up from last year’s Third Team honors, Burton is now a two-time All-ACC award-winner. However, it did mark the first time since 2017 that the league’s top scorer didn’t receive First Team honors.

Since coming back from injury on Jan. 4, Burton has produced 15 (out of a possible 18) games with 20+ points. He ultimately averaged a league-best 23.5 ppg in ACC play, beating out Miami’s Matthew Cleveland (21.3), Duke’s Cooper Flagg (21.2) and Stanford’s Maxime Raynaud (19.3).

Burton finished the regular season on another level. Since Feb. 26 (last four games), no one in the country has a higher scoring average than Burton. The Mishawaka native is averaging 31.5 ppg in that span on 46.9 percent shooting from the floor, 11-22 from beyond the arc and 39-46 from the free-throw line, all while also averaging 4.3 rpg, 3.8 apg and 1.3 spg.

As a sophomore, Burton has already surpassed Notre Dame alum Bonzie Colson for most 30+ point career games in ACC play with four.

At the conclusion of league play, Burton ranked first in scoring, seventh in three-pointers (2.2), eighth in steals (1.6), 10th in free-throw percentage (.855) and 11th in field goal percentage (.445).

Some ACC highlights include:

  • A career-high 43 points in the four-overtime thriller over Cal, setting a new Notre Dame ACC-game record. It marked the most points by an Irish player since Adrian Dantley in 1975.

  • Became the seventh fastest Irish player to reach 1,000 career points, accomplishing the feat in 54 games.

  • Dropped 30 points at #13 Clemson then a few days later tallied 29 at Wake Forest.

  • Recorded 32 points in the double-overtime win at Boston College.

  • Lifted the Irish to a 71-68 win over Georgia Tech with 18 points in the second half, finishing with 26. Burton made back-to-back triples with less than 2:30 remaining.

Lastly, with a team-best 3.1 apg average, Burton is on pace to join Irish legend and Ring of Honor inductee David Rivers as the only two in program history to finish a season with 20.0+ points and 3.0+ assists.

Below is a complete breakdown of how the media and head coaches voted for the awards. 

2024-25 ACC AWARDS

Player of the Year – Cooper Flagg, Fr., G/F, Duke

Defensive Player of the Year – Chucky Hepburn, Sr., G, Louisville

Rookie of the Year – Cooper Flagg, G/F, Duke

Most Improved Player – Donald Hand Jr., So., Boston College

Sixth Man of the Year – Jeremiah Wilkinson, Fr., G, California

Coach of the Year – Pat Kelsey, Louisville

2024-25 ALL-ACC TEAM

FIRST TEAM

Name, School, Points

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 400

Maxime Raynaud, Stanford, 392

Chucky Hepburn, Louisville, 364

Chase Hunter, Clemson, 328

Hunter Sallis, Wake Forest, 257

SECOND TEAM

RJ Davis, North Carolina, 241

Markus Burton, Notre Dame, 238

Ian Schieffelin, Clemson, 225

Kon Knueppel, Duke, 208

Jamir Watkins, Florida State, 150

THIRD TEAM

Terrence Edwards Jr., Louisville, 125

Tyrese Proctor, Duke, 72

Baye Ndongo, Georgia Tech, 72

Boopie Miller, SMU, 71

Jaland Lowe, Pitt, 62

HONORABLE MENTION

Matthew Cleveland, Miami, 49

Andrej Stojakovic, California, 48

Naithan George, Georgia Tech, 40

Isaac McKneely, Virginia, 38

J.J. Starling, Syracuse, 32

Donald Hand Jr., Boston College, 29

Cameron Hildreth, Wake Forest, 26

Khaman Maluach, Duke, 23

Viktor Lakhin, Clemson, 20

Eddie Lampkin, Syracuse, 19

Note: All-ACC Team points are determined on a 5-3-1 system (five points for first team, three points for second team, one point for third team).

Player of the Year

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 76 votes

Maxime Raynaud, Stanford, 4

Chucky Hepburn, Louisville, 1

Defensive Player of the Year

Chucky Hepburn, Louisville, 32 votes

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 26

Jaeden Zackery, Clemson, 8

Zack Austin, Pitt, 4

Maliq Brown, Duke, 3

Chad Venning, Boston College, 2

Khaman Maluach, Duke, 2

Sion James, Duke, 1

Mady Sissoko, California, 1

Tae Davis, Notre Dame 1

Cameron Hildreth, Wake Forest 1

Rookie of the Year

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 79 votes

Jeremiah Wilkinson, California, 2

Sixth Man Of the Year

Jeremiah Wilkinson, California, 22 votes

Duncan Powell, Georgia Tech, 15

Ian Jackson, North Carolina, 13

Maliq Brown, Duke, 11

Kario Oquendo, SMU, 11

Isaiah Evans, Duke, 9

Most Improved Player

Donald Hand Jr., Boston College, 25 votes

Jaylen Blakes, Stanford, 22

Tae Davis, Notre Dame, 8

Naithan George, Georgia Tech, 7

Jaland Lowe, Pitt, 7

Andrej Stojakovic, California, 4

Andrew Rohde, Virginia, 4

B.J. Edwards, SMU, 2

Eddie Lampkin, Syracuse, 1

Tyrese Proctor, Duke, 1

Coach of the Year

Pat Kelsey, Louisville, 47 votes

Jon Scheyer, Duke, 25

Brad Brownell, Clemson, 8

Kyle Smith, Stanford, 1

All-Defensive Team

Chucky Hepburn, Louisville, 70 votes

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 57

Jaeden Zackery, Clemson, 55

B.J. Edwards, SMU, 34

Sion James, Duke, 28

Zack Austin, Pitt, 28

All-Rookie Team

Cooper Flagg, Duke, 80 votes

Kon Knueppel, Duke, 79

Ian Jackson, North Carolina, 65

Jeremiah Wilkinson, California, 59

Khaman Maluach, Duke, 47

81 total votes

Note: coaches cannot vote for their players

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,