Byron Mouton

Byron King Mouton (born April 29, 1978) is an American retired basketball player. He was a starter on the University of Maryland's 2002 national championship team and played professionally in several countries.

College career

Mouton, a 6'6" swingman from Rayne, Louisiana, originally committed to play basketball at the University of Kentucky, but opted out of his commitment after Wildcats coach Rick Pitino left to coach the Boston Celtics in 1997. Instead, he opted for Tulane. After two seasons at Tulane, Mouton transferred to Maryland to play for coach Gary Williams. In his junior year of 2000–01, Mouton started and averaged 9.6 points and 4.0 rebounds per game as the Terrapins advanced to the Final Four of the 2001 NCAA Tournament. As a senior in 2001–02, Mouton upped his averages to 11.1 points and 5.0 rebounds per game as Maryland won the 2002 NCAA championship.

Professional career

At the end of his college career, Mouton was invited to the Boston Celtics' training camp, but did not make the team. He played professionally in Germany, France, China and the Dominican Republic.[1] In the United States, Mouton played in the Continental Basketball Association for the Idaho Stampede, in the NBA Development League for the Florida Flame and in the American Basketball Association for the Wilmington Sea Dawgs and the Maryland GreenHawks.[2] He founded and still runs a youth basketball program in Maryland called 6th Man Sports. Byron is currently the head basketball coach for Lanham Christian School in Lanham, MD. In 2019 Byron lead Lanham Christian to victory in the Maryland Christian Schools Tournament Division 1 championship. https://www.somdnews.com/independent/sports/scoreboard/southern-maryland-winter-sports-scoreboard/article_898caeae-623f-580d-b6c1-1775f13f8278.html

gollark: The two-dimensional compass model is inaccurate. Political leanings can only be represented accurately using my 6-dimensional hypercube.
gollark: What do you mean green quarter? Libleft?
gollark: It's been up 3 months, and apparently does something with port 9000.
gollark: Huh. Apparently I run a Docker container and I never noticed.
gollark: Did you know osmarks.tk uses `Apache/2.4.9 (GNU/Hurd 0.7)`?

References

  1. "Byron Mouton: 10 years after Maryland's national title". Baltimore Sun. 2012. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
  2. Saslow, Eli (2012). "Stuck in 'Shining Moment'". Washington Post. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.