Mac McClung

Player

Birthday January 6, 2000

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Gate City, Virginia, U.S.

Age 24 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.88 m

Weight 84 kg

#17527 Most Popular

1984

It was the best scoring performance in school history and the highest among Virginia public schools since 1984.

After the season, he was averaging 29.0 points, 5.5 assists, and 3.0 steals per game for the Blue Devils and was tabbed Southwest Virginia Boys' Basketball Player of the Year by the Bristol Herald Courier.

In the summer, he committed to play for Rutgers in college.

On December 12, he made his senior debut by scoring 47 points, shooting 18-of-23, in a 96–43 win over Lee High School.

Among those in attendance was Georgetown head coach Patrick Ewing.

1999

Matthew "Mac" McClung (born January 6, 1999) is an American professional basketball player for the Osceola Magic of the NBA G League.

He played college basketball for the Georgetown Hoyas and the Texas Tech Red Raiders.

He was a consensus three-star recruit and among the highest-ranked high school players in Virginia, all while remaining a Harry Potter enthusiast.

He is a two-time NBA Slam Dunk Contest champion, just one win away from the record of three held by Nate Robinson.

McClung went unselected in the 2021 NBA draft and spent time during the 2021–22 season with the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers.

With the South Bay Lakers of the G League, he won the 2021–22 NBA G League Rookie of the Year award.

McClung joined the Blue Coats for the 2022–23 season and signed with the 76ers in February 2023.

He won the NBA Slam Dunk Contest at both the 2023 NBA All-Star Game and the 2024 NBA All-Star Game.

McClung grew up in Gate City, Virginia, a small town of about 2,000 in the Tri-Cities metropolitan area straddling the Tennessee–Virginia border, where he initially began playing football—a sport that is far more popular than basketball in Southwest Virginia.

2017

As a junior, on February 24, 2017, he scored a career-high 64 points in a loss to Dan River High School at the Virginia High School League (VHSL) Region 2A West tournament.

Prior to his final high school season, on October 6, 2017, McClung decommitted from Rutgers.

Over one week later, he committed to Georgetown.

2018

Family members recalled in a 2018 interview that McClung was extraordinarily competitive as a child.

His father Marcus said of him, "Mac was just born with it. If you’re fixing a bowl of cereal, he’s going to make a competition."

His older sister Anna would add, "He would just come at you every day, no matter how small he was."

His parents built a basement gym in their home, initially for Anna, but Mac would regularly use it as he grew up—though he was so competitive that his father would frequently ban him from the gym to allow Anna to work out undisturbed.

He received his first significant exposure to basketball just before entering the seventh grade, when his mother Lenoir signed him up for a local youth league.

Scott Vermillion, who was McClung's coach at Gate City High School, recalled in 2018, "He ducked his head inside for a minute and basically never left."

McClung soon became more interested in basketball and began training for the sport regularly, with hopes of making the National Basketball Association (NBA), and his father was silently pleased when he gave up football after his freshman year of high school.

According to McClung, his shooting form improved after he broke his arm while snowboarding in eighth grade, and he honed the skill with Greg Ervin, the former head coach at Gate City High.

McClung first started dunking as a sophomore playing varsity basketball at Gate City High School.

He grew in profile as an acrobatic dunker through the rest of his high school career.

MaxPreps labeled him "one of nation's most exciting players."

On January 11, 2018, after opposing coach James Schooler reportedly told him "you're going to Georgetown to sit," McClung scored 44 points against Fern Creek High School of Louisville, Kentucky at the Arby's Classic tournament in Bristol, Tennessee.

McClung broke the VHSL single-season scoring record previously held by Hall of Famer Allen Iverson during the 2018 VHSL regional playoffs on February 21, surpassing Iverson's record of 948 points in 25 games—five fewer than it took Iverson to amass the previous record.

He ended his high school career with Gate City's first state championship, scoring 47 points in an 80–65 title-game win over Staunton's Robert E. Lee High.

The 47 points broke a VHSL all-classes scoring record for a championship game that had been held by former NBA player JJ Redick.

McClung finished the season with 1,153 points and 2,801 for his career, also a VHSL all-classes record, and was again named Southwest Virginia Player of the Year by the Herald Courier.

He won the slam dunk contest at the Ballislife All-American Game.

On December 22, 2018, McClung scored a freshman season-high 38 points for Georgetown in a 102–94 victory over Little Rock.

As a freshman, he averaged 13.1 points, 2.6 rebounds, and two assists per game, leading Big East Conference freshmen in scoring.

McClung was named to the Big East All-Freshman Team.

2020

In February 2020, during his sophomore season, he missed several games with a foot injury.

McClung only played 21 games due to the injury, averaging 15.7 points, 2.4 assists, and 1.4 steals in 27 minutes per game as a sophomore.

After the season, he declared for the 2020 NBA draft and signed with an NCAA-certified agent to maintain his collegiate eligibility.