Marquette's Final Four hero — went from an unknown recruit to the highest-projected player in college basketball.
Dwyane Tyrone Wade Jr. was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1982. He attended Marquette University — largely because major college programmes were not recruiting him heavily from high school — and in two seasons transformed from a relatively unknown recruit into the most discussed prospect in college basketball. He averaged 19.7 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game across two seasons. He led Marquette to the 2003 Final Four — the program's deepest tournament run since Al McGuire's 1977 championship — averaging 21.8 points, 6.5 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game in the tournament. His combination of athleticism, playmaking and scoring that emerged across two college seasons was extraordinary. Miami Heat selected him fifth overall in the 2003 NBA Draft — in the same class as LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony. His Marquette career is cited in recruiting discussions as the best example of a player who elevated his own assessment through development at a smaller programme. He became a three-time NBA champion and one of the finest shooting guards of his generation. His path — overlooked by the elite programs, developed at Marquette, taken fifth overall — is one of college basketball's great developmental stories.
Final Four (2003)
Career Honours
- Final Four (2003)
- Conference USA Player of Year
- All-American
- Emerged as top prospect in two years