Marena Whittle

Marena Whittle (born 28 January 1994) is an Australian professional basketball player for the Townsville Fire in the Women's National Basketball League WNBL.

Marena Whittle
No. 21 Perth Lynx
PositionGuard / Forward
LeagueWNBL
Personal information
Born (1994-01-28) 28 January 1994
Vermont South, Victoria
NationalityAustralian
Listed height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
Career information
High schoolCaulfield Grammar
(Melbourne, Victoria)
CollegeNorth Dakota State (2012–2016)
WNBA draft2016 / Undrafted
Playing career2017–present
Career history
2017–2018Townsville Fire
2018–2019Bendigo Spirit
2019–presentPerth Lynx

College

Whittle played college basketball at North Dakota State University in Fargo, North Dakota for the Bison in NCAA Division I.[1]

Statistics

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG TO PPG
2012–13 North Dakota State 29 26 28.4 .325 .250 .710 7.1 1.1 1.1 0.4 1.7 6.7
2013–14 North Dakota State 30 28 28.4 .407 .333 .826 7.1 1.2 1.1 0.9 1.4 13.4
2014–15 North Dakota State 29 29 29.9 .378 .314 .714 7.3 2.2 1.7 1.0 2.3 8.6
2015–16 North Dakota State 28 28 35.8 .391 .333 .832 10.3 2.9 2.1 0.9 3.5 16.8
Career 116 111 30.5 .383 .310 .784 7.9 1.9 1.5 0.8 2.2 11.3

Career

WNBL

In 2017, Whittle ventured north after signing her first WNBL contract with the Townsville Fire for the 2017–18 season.[2] There, Whittle played under Claudia Brassard, however her season was largely disrupted due to injury and she did not take to the court all season.

In May 2018, Whittle returned to her home state after signing with the Bendigo Spirit for the 2018–19 season.[3] In 21 games for Bendigo, Whittle averaged 7.2 points and 4.0 assists per game.[4] During the 2019 off-season, she played for the Knox Raiders in the NBL1.[5]

In April 2019, Whittle signed with her third WNBL team in as many years after joining the Perth Lynx for the 2019–20 season.[6]

gollark: I have stuff like "read file to string", "write string to file", "recursively copy table", "map over table", "read URL to string", "convert byte table to hex", and "split string" duplicated all over the place.
gollark: I've been meaning to make a useful utility library but never got to it.
gollark: I think the potatOS one returns a table, doesn't include the separator, and uses a string as a separator, not a pattern.
gollark: PotatOS lets you split strings with the division operator.
gollark: (I'm going to come up with more eventually)

References

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