Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Syracuse’s Mangakahia an assist machine

- By John Kekis

Louisville coach Jeff Walz was fresh from an important road victory over Syracuse, and the first thing he wanted to talk about was the Orange’s point guard.

That would be Tiana Mangakahia, a 5-foot-6 sophomore from Australia in her first season of Division I ball. She had 20 points and 10 assists — her 12th double-double of the season — against the fourth-ranked team in the nation, and the Cardinals coach was impressed.

“She is fun to watch,” Walz said after last Sunday’s win. “If you’re a basketball fan and you don’t come out here to watch her, shame on you. She’s a highlight reel. She made some big-time baskets and some big-time plays.”

Mangakahia has been doing that since the start of the season. She had 10 or more assists in her first eight games, and as the regular season winds down leads the nation by a long shot with 244, an average of 10.2 per game. (The Division I record for assists in a season is 355, set by Penn State’s Suzie McConnell in 1987).

What makes Mangakahia’s performanc­e even more remarkable is that she spent the previous two years at Hutchinson Community College in Kansas, a basketball powerhouse at the junior college level that finished 33-2 in 2017, and only played on the scout team.

“What she’s doing, it’s crazy. Crazy,” Syracuse coach Quentin Hillsman marveled.

The sticking point at Hutchinson was a contract Mangakahia had signed with a club in Australia. Hutchinson coach John Ontjes said the National Junior College Athletic Associatio­n gave the go-ahead for her to play, but he said the organizati­on also said the issue raised some “red flags” and he opted not to take a chance that might have jeopardize­d her future.

“She just practiced for us,” Ontjes said. “It was very hard for us because we saw every day what she could do. She was the best player on our team and she made our team better in practice. We knew how much better we could be with her on the floor. She’s really a coach’s dream.”

Mangakahia, who was cleared to play by the NCAA, nearly didn’t stick it out.

“It was very hard,” she said. “The second year was probably the hardest. After the first game of my sophomore year, I said, ‘I don’t know if I can do this all over again.”’

Introduced to basketball at age 5 by her parents, Mangakahia fell in love with the game and honed her skills playing with her five brothers. “I just loved playing,” she said. “I wanted to be on every team.”

She followed good friend Kalani Purcell, a New Zealand native, to Hutchinson, and despite Mangakahia’s role there, scouting services took note.

“They knew how talented Tiana is,” Ontjes said.

Mangakahia chose Syracuse over offers from Kansas, Oklahoma State and UMass, among others, mainly because of Hillsman and his staff.

“The coaches had faith in me and believed in me and my ability,” she said. “I think that has helped my confidence a lot after not playing for two years.”

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