| Arizona State |
| Stevin Smith (1993) |
| Arkansas |
| Corliss Williamson (1993) |
| Auburn (AL) |
| Wesley Person (1993) |
| Boston College (MA) |
Troy Bell (2001)
Bill Curley (1993) |
| Charlotte (NC) |
| Curtis Withers (2005) |
| Connecticut |
Caron Butler (2001)
Rudy Gay (2005)
Marcus Williams (2005) |
| Duke (NC) |
Carlos Boozer (2001)
Chris Duhon (2001)
Dahntay Jones (2001)
Cherokee Parks (1993)
J.J. Redick (2005) |
| Georgetown (DC) |
Othella Harrington (1993)
Michael Sweetney (2001) |
| Illinois |
| Brian Cook (2001) |
| Indiana |
| Andrae Patterson (1997) |
|
| Iowa |
| Reggie Evans (2001) |
| Kansas |
Nick Collison (2001)
Steve Woodberry (1993) |
| Kentucky |
| Rajon Rondo (2005) |
| Louisiana State |
| Glen Davis (2005) |
| Michigan State |
| Marcus Taylor (2001) |
| Minnesota |
| Sam Jacobson (1997) |
| Nevada |
| Nick Fazekas (2005) |
| Northwestern (IL) |
| Evan Eschmeyer (1997) |
| Notre Dame |
Pat Garrity (1997)
Monty Williams (1993) |
| Oklahoma |
Corey Brewer (1997)
Taj Gray (2005) |
| Purdue (IN) |
Chad Austin (1997)
Brian Cardinal (1997)
Brad Miller (1997) |
|
| St. Joseph's (PA) |
| Jameer Nelson (2001) |
| Syracuse (NY) |
Adrian Autry (1993)
Terrence Roberts (2005) |
| Temple (PA) |
Mardy Collins (2005)
Eddie Jones (1993) |
| Texas Christian |
| Mike Jones (1997) |
| Texas Tech |
| Cory Carr (1997) |
| UCLA |
| Jason Kapono (2001) |
| Utah |
Mike Doleac (1997)
Andre Miller (1997) |
| Villanova |
| Allan Ray (2005) |
| Virginia |
| Cory Alexander (1993) |
| Wake Forest |
| Justin Gray (2005) |
| Wyoming |
| Theo Ratliff (1993) |
|
NOTE: The FIBA U21 World Championship was originally the FIBA 22 & Under World Championship and designed for men 22-years-old or younger. FIBA lowered the age eligibility to 21-years-old or younger in December 1998 and changed the competition name to the World Championship for Young Men, before renaming the event as the FIBA U21 World Championship in 2004.