Manute Bol could have been the oldest man ever to play in the NBA.
The 7-foot-6-inch shot-blocking phenomenon was brought from the Sudan to the United States by former Cleveland State coach Kevin Mackey in the 1980s. Mackey told the sports site Zagsblog that he made up Bol's birthday out of thin air when he got him here.
“I gave him his birthday because they didn’t know how old he was,” Mackey said. “Every athletic door is open at 19, every athletic door is closed when you’re 35. He was probably 40, 50 years old when he was playing in the NBA.”
Mackey, who is now a scout for the Indiana Pacers, brought Bol over in 1985 and came up with a birthday -- Oct. 16, 1962 -- that would make sense for a player looking to play college and then pro ball.
“It was in October, I wanted to make it after September 1,” Mackey said. “I wanted to make sure he was young enough because he didn’t have an age. I think he was [in his 40s], I really do. But there’s no way of ever really knowing.”
“Every athletic door is open at 19, every athletic door is closed when you’re 35"
“[Bol] had no idea of his age and the kid who came over with him didn’t know how old he was,” Mackey added. “No one knew how old he was.”
Bol didn’t end up playing for Cleveland State because he struggled learning English. Instead he wound up playing a year for the University of Bridgeport and was drafted by the Washington Bullets.
Bol played in the NBA from 1985-1995 and died in 2010 of kidney failure and complications from Stevens-Johnson syndrome, a severe skin reaction. He was the tallest player in NBA history, and the only player to record more blocks than points over the course of his career.
His son, Bol Bol, is a star 7-foot-1-inch center in high school who recently chose to play college basketball at the University of Oregon, and is expected to be a high first round pick when he declares for the NBA draft.