Greg Mangano

Greg Mangano (born October 28, 1989) is an American basketball player for Bambitious Nara of B.League. He played college basketball for the Yale Bulldogs. He is known for versatility as a frontcourt player and his polished face up game offensively.[1]

Greg Mangano
Free agent
PositionCenter / Power forward
Personal information
Born (1989-10-28) October 28, 1989
Orange, Connecticut
NationalityAmerican
Listed height6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)
Listed weight240 lb (109 kg)
Career information
High schoolNotre-Dame West Haven
(West Haven, Connecticut)
CollegeYale (2008–2012)
NBA draft2012 / Undrafted
Playing career2012–present
Career history
2012Antalya
2012–2013Força Lleida
2013–2014ratiopharm Ulm
2014–2015Kauhajoen Karhu
2015–2016Kangoeroes Basket Willebroek
2016-2017Al Nassr BC
2017Sendai 89ers
2017–2018Kauhajoen Karhu
2018–2019Kyiv-Basket
2019-2020Bambitious Nara
Career highlights and awards

High school

Mangano attended Notre-Dame West Haven, where he was a two-time all-state player and a two-time all-league selection. His senior year was his best year, as he averaged 26 points, 15 rebounds, and 6 blocks per game.[2] These numbers were good enough to get him MVP honors and a nomination for the McDonald's All-American Game. Rivals.com ranked Mahimgnano as a 2-star prospect.[3]

College

Freshman year

Mangano received the John C. Cobb Award for the best freshman player on the Yale team as the Bulldogs went 13–15.[4] He received little playing time, averaging just 6.5 minutes per game, although he did manage to score 2.1 points per game.

Sophomore year

Mangano was given a bigger role in his sophomore year. He hit the weight room hard over the summer following his freshman year. His playing time tripled, and he led the Ivy League in blocks with 2 per game. He also added 7.5 points and 5.5 rebounds per game. Despite his success, Yale struggled, going 12–19.[5]

Junior year

Mangano had a breakout season his junior year, averaging a double-double for the Bulldogs with 16.3 points per game and 10 rebounds per game, along with 3 blocks per game.[6] His 85 blocks were a Yale record, and the third-highest total in Ivy League history. As well as finishing second in scoring, Mangano led the Ivy League in blocks and rebounding; his totals were good for 9th and 24th in the nation respectively. His play was good enough to warrant selection to the All-Ivy first team and the National Association of Basketball Coaches All-district first team.[7] Mangano declared for the 2011 NBA draft, but withdrew his name before the deadline.[8] Yale had some success, finishing the year with a 15–13 record.[9]

Senior year

Mangano came into his senior year considered a strong contender for Ivy League Player of the Year. The Bulldogs had early success and impressed in many of their games against stronger opposition. Mangano was particularly impressive against the then-10th ranked Florida Gators, scoring 26 points, grabbing 12 rebounds, blocking two shots, and making 4 of the 6 three-pointers that he attempted.[10] The Bulldogs had an outside chance to claim the Ivy League title entering their final 3 games, but losses to Princeton and Penn prevented the Bulldogs from claiming the title. Mangano's statistical numbers were very similar to those in his junior year. He led the Ivy League in rebounds and blocks, averaging 9.7 and 2.2 per game respectively. He was also sixth in the Ivy League in scoring with 18.2 points per game.[11] He was named to the All-Ivy First Team. In terms of team success, Mangano's senior year was his best at Yale, as the Bulldogs went 19-10[12] and qualified for the CollegeInsider.com Tournament, where the team lost in the first round to the Rakim Sanders-led Fairfield Stags 68–56. Mangano had 17 points and 8 rebounds.[13]

College legacy

Mangano helped bring Yale back to relevance in the Ivy League after years at the bottom of the league. He finished his career with 213 blocks, which is most in Yale history- more than former NBA player Chris Dudley- and the third most in Ivy League history. Mangano was also sixth in school history in rebounds and 13th in points.

NBA

Mangano was honored as one of the nation's best seniors when he was selected to participate in the prestigious Portsmouth Invitational Tournament.[14] His best game was his second; he scored 13 points on 5–11 shooting, including 3 of 5 from three, and grabbed 9 boards. he started and played 26 minutes.[15] Mangano averaged 10.7 points, 6 rebounds, and 1 block per game while shooting 46.2 percent from three-point range, which was the sixth best percentage in the tournament.[16] Despite working out with many teams, Mangano went undrafted in the 2012 NBA Draft, although according to his agent Mangano would have been picked if he had been European. Mangano said that this shows that, "the NBA still doesn't respect the level of play in the Ivy League." [17]

Europe

After going undrafted, Mangano signed with Antalya BB in the Turkish Basketball League[18] On 29 December 2012, he left Turkey to join Força Lleida in the LEB Oro, Spain's second division.[19] In 2013, Mangano signed with ratiopharm Ulm in Germany.[20]

On August 12, 2018, Mangano signed with the Ukrainian team Kyiv-Basket. He chose the jersey number 44.

USA Basketball

Mangano's play led him to try out for the USA World University Games Team in 2008. He made the team, and appeared in 6 of the team's 8 games.[21] He averaged 3.2 points and 3.2 rebounds per game, while averaging 11.3 minutes per game. He was second on the team with 5 blocks.[22] The US went 7–1, good for 5th place.[23]

gollark: I just remain slightly dissatisfied with all programming languages in existence, it's great.
gollark: The entire language is stacks of accursed mold, apart from some recent nice things like destructuring.
gollark: I mostly use JS because I can quickly write slightly horrible code in it, and browsers.
gollark: There should not be an external tool necessary to detect stupid errors.
gollark: And the obvious `+` thing does the *wrong* thing instead of just erroring. This is bad.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.