The award for the most outstanding player of the NCAA Tournament's Final Four comes with prestige. Past winners form an exclusive club, including Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West and Magic Johnson.
The honor comes with a small trophy, too, one mailed to winners once March Madness concludes, an NCAA spokesperson said.
What it no longer comes with, though, is job security.
"It's a lot different," past winner Patrick Ewing told NBC News, "from when I played."
Proving that a player could come up clutch on college hoops' biggest stage was once a reliable indicator of a can't-miss prospect. Since the start of the modern era of the NBA draft in 1966, 28 of the next 42 Final Four Most Outstanding Players were selected within the first 10 picks of their drafts.
Not every winner would go on to become Hall of Famers like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the former all-time NBA scoring leader, or the quartet of Isiah Thomas, James Worthy, Hakeem Olajuwon and Ewing, who won Most Outstanding Player from 1981 to 1985. Yet many carved out long, lucrative careers; in that same span that started in 1966, 25 winners went on to spend at least a decade in the NBA.
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But since 2012 — when one-and-done star Anthony Davis earned the award, was drafted No. 1 overall and began a career that could likely, one day, land him in the Hall of Fame — the last 12 Most Outstanding Player winners have combined for zero All-Star appearances. Four have gone undrafted. Three others quickly washed out of the NBA.
Tristen Newton had no doubt that winning the honor in 2024 while leading Connecticut to its second consecutive national championship helped his case when he auditioned in front of NBA teams. It "was one of the first things that teams would mention" during their interviews, Newton told NBC News.
"But nowadays," he added, "teams in the NBA are looking for, I guess, the younger guys than the more-ready guy who can come and contribute."
Newton, 24, learned that on draft night, when he was selected 49th overall in a 58-player draft. In two seasons, Newton, a 6-foot-5 guard, has appeared in eight NBA games while playing primarily in the NBA's developmental minor league.
He added that "NBA and college careers, I guess those are two different — they don't really correlate with each other anymore."
Winning Most Outstanding Player is but one of hundreds of data points NBA teams use to evaluate prospects, from how they play on the court to how they carry themselves off it. Indeed, two executives of NBA teams, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in exchange for their candor about the draft process, said they didn't even realize the past connection between winners of the award and often strong NBA careers. They viewed a strong performance in the tournament and particularly the Final Four as a helpful line in a player's broader résumé but not a difference-maker. Conversely, struggling in the tournament wouldn't be held against a prospect who had played well all season, an executive said.
When Ewing left Georgetown for the NBA in 1985 and was drafted first overall by the New York Knicks, he was the definition of a college superstar. He had led the Hoyas to three NCAA championship games in four seasons, winning once, and he remains so closely intertwined with his college success, in fact, that this month AT&T placed him in not one but two ads playing throughout the NCAA Tournament.
In 1985, however, the pathway to the NBA was far more limited than it is four decades later. With only a few exceptions, being eligible for the draft then required a player to be at least three years out of high school, and international players often had to be at least 21. Of the 24 players taken in that year's first round, just three were international; last year, international players accounted for more than a third of the first round.
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A record 135 foreign-born players were on NBA rosters at the start of this season, many of whom never played collegiately. That has meant more competition for a few roster spots.
"When I played, there was a few guys from Europe that was in the league or from Africa with Hakeem and Dikembe [Mutombo] and those guys. But now it's a lot larger pot," Ewing said.
And many foreign players, he said, are the "cream of the crop" — such as Nikola Jokic and Giannis Antetokounmpo, who have combined to win the Most Valuable Player award in five of the last seven NBA seasons. They never played a second in college.
It isn't that players are leaving college worse than in previous eras, said a high-ranking NBA team executive who has helped oversee college scouting. Younger players now have access to better technology, equipment and health care. But the difficulty of sticking in the NBA for even decorated college players has increased as eligibility rules have changed and, as a result, so have the draft preferences of NBA teams. Since 2006, draft-eligible prospects must be 19 and a year removed from high school.
"The thought is always you get these younger guys in your [NBA or G-League] program and they don't have to worry about school and you can really develop their bodies and games and make them better players," an NBA team executive said. "The old-school mentality was 'I just want ready-made players who can win games,' and that's changed in the NBA. We're spending more time developing guys than winning right off the bat with them."
In theory, a younger prospect arrives with fewer bad habits and can play longer.
"I think they definitely want younger guys," said Walter Clayton Jr., who was 22 when he won the 2025 tournament's Most Outstanding Player with Florida. Clayton was drafted 18th overall and now plays for the Memphis Grizzlies.
There's another major difference, too.
The fact that "the game is so different is the first hurdle," the executive said.
Translating what worked in college to the NBA used to be easier, because the styles at both levels were similar. But the college and pro game have diverged. A decade ago, college teams averaged 18.6 3-pointers per game and NBA teams 24.1. This season, the college average crept to a record average of23.2; pros, meanwhile, aretaking 37.
Adjusting to the NBA means getting used to more skilled opponents and roles that can be wildly different from the responsibilities college stars were used to, Clayton said. But certain aspects of playing well under the pressure and spotlight of a Final Four do carry over to the pros, he said.
"Being able to stay calm in high-pressure situations, it definitely helped me," he said. "Some teams view that as a characteristic or an intangible."
As the latest tournament began in late March, the Grizzlies set up televisions showing March Madness action around the arena for players to watch. Florida players on last year's national championship team began pinging messages back and forth in a group chat, Clayton said. The memories were nice. But now, he has a job to do — sticking in the NBA, which is not given.
"The award is the award," Clayton said. "I'm appreciative of it, but it's kind of in the past. Just gotta get adjusted at this level and make things happen here."