LANCASTER, PA – Johns Hopkins place three athletes on the 2024-25 All-Centennial Conference Men's Basketball Team it was announced this afternoon. Senior
John Windley and junior
Charlie Jackson were named to the second team and senior
Brian Johansson was named honorable mention.
This is the fourth straight year that the Blue Jays have produced three or more All-Centennial Conference selections. The three selections are tied for most in the conference this season. Hopkins has now produced 64 All-Centennial Conference selections since the inception of the league in 1993-94.
Windley earns All-Centennial Conference honors for the second straight year, after earning first team honors last year. He led the Blue Jays and ranked 10
th in the conference in scoring (14.1 ppg). He also led the team in assists (49), field goals (121) and three-pointers (65). In addition, he finished tied for second in rebounds with 4.7 per game.
Windley finished his career ranked among the program leaders in multiple categories. Windley ranks 11
th in points (1,209), sixth in three-pointers (189), tied for third in free throw percentage (.833), 13
th in defensive rebounds (333), tied for 14
th in games played (104) and 12
th in minutes played (2,749). He is tied for first in program history with 35 consecutive games with a made three-pointers. Windley also had a 25-game streak, which is seventh longest streak in JHU history.
Jackson had a career year, averaging 13.0 points, 6.3 rebounds and 1.4 assists while shooting 45.0 percent from the field. He led the team and is tied for fourth in the conference in rebounding. He is also third in the Centennial with 127 defensive rebounds. Jackson scored in double figures in 19 of 27 games, including four 20-point games. He also turned in a pair of double doubles and scored a career-high 25 points in the win over Franklin & Marshall on January 18.
Johansson turned in his best season in his final campaign, with 13.9 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.7 assists per game. He shot 43.2 percent from the field and 39.7 percent from downtown, finishing second on the team with 92 three-pointers. Johansson finished his career having made at least one three-pointer in 28 straight games, tied for the fifth longest streak in program history. He ranks 14
th in JHU history in career three-point attempts (370), 14
th in three-pointers (139) and tied for 19
th in three-point percentage (.376).