Mario Bennett
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Position | power forward |
|---|---|
| Height | 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) |
| Weight | 235 lb (107 kg) |
| League | NBA |
| Team | Hebraica y Macabi |
| Born | August 1, 1973 Denton, Texas |
| Nationality | USA |
| College | Arizona State University |
| Draft | 1st round, 27th overall, 1995 Phoenix Suns |
| Pro career | 1995–present |
| Former teams | Phoenix Suns ('95-'96) Grand Rapids Hoops ('96-'97) ('02-'03) Yakima Sun Kings ('96-'97) Los Angeles Lakers ('97-'98) Chicago Bulls ('98-'99) Los Angeles Clippers ('00) San Diego Wildfire ('00-'01) CB Málaga ('01-'02) Montpellier ('01-'02) San Miguel Beer ('01-'02) Paris Basket Racing ('02-'03) Autodor Saratov ('03-'04) Sioux Falls Skyforce ('03-'04) Fastlink Amman ('04-'05) Mabetex Pristina ('04-'05) JDA Dijon ('05-'07) Hebraica y Macabi ('08) |
| Official profile | Info Page |
Mario Marcell Bennett (born August 1, 1973 in Denton, Texas) is an American professional basketball player. He is currently playing in Uruguay for Hebraica y Macabi.
Contents |
[edit] College Career
The youngest of four children, Bennett was an early entry candidate for the 1995 NBA Draft despite having been in school for four years, because he missed the entire 1992-93 season recovering from knee surgery. Although he played only three seasons, he placed first all-time in school history in blocked shots (191) and field goal percentage (.587) and was eighth in rebounding (675). During the 1994-95 campaign he set the Pac-10 single-season mark for blocks with 115, and he became only the third player in Sun Devils history to net 600 or more points in a season. The powerful forward finished his career with 219 dunks. Bennett missed all of 1992-93 and the first six games of the 1993-94 campaign while recovering from left knee surgery to repair anterior cruciate ligament tears. [1]
He finished his 87 game college career with per-game averages of 32.3 minutes, 15.7 points on 58.7% shooting and 53.0% free throws, 7.8 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 2.8 turnovers, 2.2 steals and 1.1 blocks.[2]
[edit] NBA Career
Selected by the Phoenix Suns in the first round of the 1995 NBA Draft with the 27th overall pick, Bennett was the first Sun Devil to be drafted in 12 years since Byron Scott. Bennett was the top rebounder in preseason for Phoenix with 8.8 rpg but he underwent arthroscopic knee surgery on Nov. 1. He spent four months on the injured list before finally playing in 19 late-season game for the Suns. He was waived by the Suns on 10/29/96. He averaged 8.0 ppg and 6.3 rpg in 1996-97 in 7 games for Grand Rapids and Yakima of the CBA.
He was signed by the Los Angeles Lakers as a free agent on September 21, 1997 and played in 45 games in 1997-98, averaging 3.9 points and 2.8 rebounds per game in limited action. Prior to the 1998-99 season, Mario Bennett signed with the Chicago Bulls as a free agent on 1/31/99 and was waived by the Bulls on 2/16/99. He went on to play one game for the Los Angeles Clippers in the 1999-2000 season.
Bennett has career per-game averages of 4.0 points on 54.4% FG and 51.1% FT, and 2.7 rebounds on 8.9 minutes per game. He has registered career highs of 21 points and 14 rebounds on separate occasions.
[edit] Overseas Career
He began to make a name in Europe at Montpellier in 2001. He later left for to suit up for San Miguel Beer in the Philippine Basketball Association. He went back to France to have a superb season with Paris Basket Racing.
Afterwards, the man with a tattooed body from top to bottom (eyes in the back, Mario bros on the arm, a basketball player on the calf), turned his services east for the Russian team, Autodor Saratov. After a few games in Russia, Bennett leaves his team amicably.
After a stint in the CBA again, he joined the Fastlink Aman team (Jordan). Knee problems cut his stint there and he went to seek treatment for that. After a knee operation, he came back to play with Mabetex Pristina in Kosovo.
Finally, at the age of 32, he joined Dijon, whose coach Monclar knew his qualities. The stint, where he averaged 10 points and 9 rebounds, resulted a selection for the All Star game. A broken metatarsal halted Bennett's season in January 2007.[3]
[edit] Player Profile
Bennett's leaping ability made him a good shot-blocker in college, but he is a rather disappointing rebounder. He is quicker than average but is light and can be pushed around. He was an excellent college low-post player but has poor shooting, passing and dribbling skills. He is a tremendous finisher but has no shot beyond 15 feet. On defense, he's good at moving his feet and getting the loose ball.[4]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- College & NBA stats @ basketballreference.com
- Player file @ NBA.com
- Stats @ lnb.fr

