No. 40 – Changwon LG Sakers | |
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Position | Power forward / Center |
League | Korean Basketball League |
Personal information | |
Born |
Garner, North Carolina |
March 3, 1986
Nationality | American / Central African |
Listed height | 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) |
Listed weight | 240 lb (109 kg) |
Career information | |
High school |
Garner Magnet (Garner, North Carolina) |
College | Clemson (2004–2008) |
NBA draft | 2008 / Undrafted |
Playing career | 2008–present |
Career history | |
2008 | Colorado 14ers |
2009–2010 | Beijing Ducks |
2010 | Caciques de Humacao |
2010–2011 | Oyak Renault |
2011 | Caciques de Humacao |
2011–2012 | Mersin Büyükşehir Belediyesi S.K. |
2012 | Capitanes de Arecibo |
2012–2013 | Springfield Armor |
2013 | Maine Red Claws |
2013 | Sioux Falls Skyforce |
2014 | San Mig Super Coffee Mixers |
2014–2015 | Enel Brindisi |
2015 | Shaanxi Wolves |
2015–present | Al Shabab |
2016 | Shaanxi Wolves |
2016–present | Changwon LG Sakers |
Career highlights and awards | |
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James Dixon Mays (born March 3, 1986) is an American-born naturalized Central African professional basketball player for Changwon LG Sakers of the Korean Basketball League. He represented the Central African Republic at the last 2011 FIBA Africa Championship.
Mays averaged 20.1 points, 15 rebounds, two steals and two assists per game for Garner High in 2003-04. He shot a strong 54.3 percent from the field that year when he led Garner to the conference championship. A McDonald's All-American nominee as a senior, he was also named MVP of his conference and to the all-conference team. He played in the North Carolina vs. South Carolina High School All-Star game where he played against Clemson classmate Sam Perry. Perry was the top scorer, but Mays was named the MVP. Along with that, he also played in the East vs. West North Carolina Coaches Association All-Star game in July. He scored a season high 30 points against East Wake High School as a senior, but he had a 36-point game as a junior against Southeast Raleigh for his career high. In his junior year, he scored 19.8 points and 11.9 rebounds per game.
Mays started eight of the 32 games in which he appeared. Averaged 4.3 points and better than one steal per game.
Started all 11 games in which he appeared. (Mays was ruled academically ineligible for the second semester). The Tigers posted an 11-0 mark with Mays, and managed just an 8-13 record in his stead. Averaged 9.2 points and a career-best 7.6 rebounds. Posted 19 points and seven rebounds against South Carolina.
Mays posted career-bests in points (12.2 ppg), assists (2.7 apg) and steals (1.9 spg); also averaged 6.4 rebounds. Set Clemson single-season records for assists (95) and steals (69) for a frontcourt player. Posted eight double-digit rebounding efforts and seven point-rebound double-doubles. Exemplified his balanced play with an 18-point, nine-rebound, four-assist, five-steal, two-block effort against Monmouth.
Fought through a rash of injuries to finish second on the team in rebounds per game, third in steals, while posting a double-digit scoring average. Named to the ACC-All Tournament Second Team after helping the Tigers reach the title game. Led Clemson in rebounding 10 times. Recorded a career-high six steals in a season-opening win against Furman. Tallied a season-high 20 points in a comeback, road win at Maryland. Suffered a broken hand against North Carolina but still produced nine points, eight rebounds, four steals and two blocks.