The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ryan Mutombo will transfer to Ga. Tech

Son of NBA great Dikembe played 3 seasons with Hoyas.

- By Chad Bishop chad.bishop@ajc.com

Ryan Mutombo, the son of former NBA great Dikembe Mutombo and a former standout at the Lovett School, confirmed with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that he intends to transfer for Georgia Tech for the upcoming 2024-25 season.

A 7-foot-2, 259-pound center, Mutombo entered the NCAA transfer portal in April from Georgetown. He played in just 15 games and only 55 minutes during the 202324 season, his third with the Hoyas.

Mutombo was an all-state selection as a senior at Lovett School in 2021. He scored more than 1,500 career points and averaged 24 points, 12 rebounds and 4.8 blocks as a junior. Mutombo was considered a four-star prospect by the 247Sports Composite and had more than a dozen scholarshi­p offers, including ones from Tech, Georgia, Arizona and

Tennessee.

In July 2021, Mutombo enrolled at Georgetown, where his father was twice the Big East defensive player of the year. Ryan Mutombo played in 27 games as a freshman and 12 as a sophomore. He scored a career-high 15 points in a 2021 game against Maryland-Baltimore County, a game in which he recorded his lone career double-double.

Dikembe Mutombo, the No. 4 overall pick of the 1991 NBA draft, was an NBA allstar eight times and four times the league’s defensive

player of the year. He joined the Hawks in 1996 and played for Atlanta until he was traded to the 76ers in 2001. Dikembe Mutombo and Tech head coach Damon Stoudamire played in the NBA together from 19952008.

Ryan Mutombo would be the seventh new member of the ’24-25 Yellow Jackets, joining Colorado transfer Luke O’Brien, Oklahoma transfer Javian McCollum and freshmen signees Jaeden Mustaf, Cole Kirouac, Doryan Onwuchekwa and Darrion Sutton.

LOS ANGELES — When “Welcome to Wrexham,” the Emmy-winning FX docuseries, kicked off its third season Thursday, our intrepid heroes were preparing for their first season in the fourth tier of English soccer after 15 years in the semipro National League.

Funding the team’s rise, and saving the down-on-its-luck Welsh city where the club plays, was the whole point of the series when actors Rob McElhenney (“It’s Always Sunny in Philadelph­ia”) and Ryan Reynolds (“Deadpool”) came up with the idea of buying Wrexham AFC during the pandemic.

So when the club, the third-oldest profession­al team in the world, was promoted last April — and, spoiler alert, was promoted again this month to the third-tier League One — shouldn’t that have been a wrap? Wasn’t that the time to roll credits?

Not necessaril­y. Because now the goal has changed.

“That’s the beauty of sport. You just don’t know where it’s going to end,” said McElhenney, a hardcore fan of Philadelph­ia’s profession­al sports teams. “Our ultimate goal is to build a sustainabl­e model that will allow us to not only get to the Premier League, but sustain in the Premier League and eventually win the Premier League and be in the Champions League.”

To put that in perspectiv­e, in U.S. sports that would be like taking a rookie league baseball team and turning it into the New York Yankees — if baseball had promotion and relegation, which it does not. So there really is no comparison.

But since McElhenney and Reynolds come from a world of make believe, where nothing is impossible, why not dream big? Well, for one thing this isn’t a Hollywood script in which the guy gets the girl and evil never wins. There’s no guarantee “Welcome to Wrexham” will have a happy ending.

But it wouldn’t be wise to bet against that.

“That’s part of the gambit here. You’re surrenderi­ng to fate,” Reynolds said. “You can’t write the script in advance. You can only work as hard as humanly possible to put the best club and infrastruc­ture out on the onto that pitch and that’s what makes it compelling. That we don’t have that kind of control.

“And in football, not unlike life, anything can happen.”

Also in football, not unlike life, spending a lot of money can sure improve your odds. And McElhenney and Reynolds have spent a lot of money. It cost them more than $2.5 million to buy the team and another $4.7 million to buy back the freehold of the team’s historic stadium, according to published reports.

They spent on players too. Paul Mullin, the league’s leading scorer in Wrexham’s final two seasons in

the fifth-tier National League, and teammate Ben Tozer each made more than $5,000 a week, about three times the league’s average wage. Two others reportedly made $3,700 a week.

That was steep in the National League, one that had been made up of small-town teams often owned by local businessme­n who weren’t backed by Hollywood studios. But it’s perfectly legal, too, since the league does not have a salary cap or fair play protection­s.

“At the moment, there’s no level playing field,” Jim Parmenter, chairman of National League club Dover, told the Athletic last spring.

In the first episode of Season 2, McElhenney and Reynolds are told Wrexham lost $12 million in their first season despite leading the league in attendance. Yet they kept spending to buy promotion to League Two later that same season, something for which they make no apologies.

“The rules and regulation­s around these leagues are really prescripti­ve,” Reynolds said. “You have a very clear set of boundaries and rules to work within. And I think every team is encouraged to work as hard as you possibly can and do whatever you could possibly can within those margins.

“That’s exactly what we’ve been doing with Wrexham. You can loath me, you can loath Rob, but it’s pretty damn hard to root against this town and what they’ve been through for so many decades and what this club has meant to this town. So we will do anything humanly possible to see that Wrexham continues to progress and grow in the in the world football community.”

Besides, Wrexham isn’t the only club or community that has benefited. According to the Athletic, 22 the 72 teams in the Championsh­ip, League One and

League Two — at the second, third and fourth levels of English soccer — are either wholly owned by or have minority investors hailing from the U.S. with 14 of them experienci­ng new investment since the actors took control at Wrexham in February 2021.

Thanks to the focus of the docuseries, the profile of League Two has never been higher. And that’s meant higher salaries, more interest and larger crowds, with three teams topping 10,800 a game heading into last weekend, about double the league average last season.

The TV show, Wrexham’s summer tour of the U.S. — a trip that will be repeated this July — plus sponsorshi­p deals with United Airlines and others could push Wrexham’s turnover this season to more than $25 million, nearly four times what it was just two years ago. That’s a rising tide that will lift all the boats in League Two — and, presumably, next season in League One.

It’s already lifted Wrexham — the team and the town, which were struggling through some rough times when McElhenney and Reynolds took their gamble, riding to the rescue and lifting the hopes and self-confidence of both.

“You know, there’s just no sure things. It’s why they have the great expression giant killers in this sport,” Reynolds said. “I think the thing that I’m most surprised by in this whole experience, aside from how forthcomin­g and vulnerable the folks in Wrexham have been telling their story, is how romantic this game is.

“Prior to Wrexham most of my football exposure came from watching the Canadian national women’s team. I saw glimpses of it with those women fighting for their country and their sport. But boy have I seen it in Wrexham and in this sport in general.

“It’s just the most romantic thing in the world.”

Why would anyone want to see that end?

 ?? COURTESY OF THE LOVETT SCHOOL ?? Ryan Mutombo (21) was an all-state selection as a senior at Lovett School in 2021 and earned more than a dozen scholarshi­p offers.
COURTESY OF THE LOVETT SCHOOL Ryan Mutombo (21) was an all-state selection as a senior at Lovett School in 2021 and earned more than a dozen scholarshi­p offers.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? “Our ultimate goal is to build a sustainabl­e model that will allow us to not only get to the Premier League, but sustain in the Premier League and eventually win the Premier League and be in the Champions League,” says Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney. Actors Ryan Reynolds and McElhenney bought the team in 2020.
PHOTOS BY JON SUPER/ASSOCIATED PRESS “Our ultimate goal is to build a sustainabl­e model that will allow us to not only get to the Premier League, but sustain in the Premier League and eventually win the Premier League and be in the Champions League,” says Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney. Actors Ryan Reynolds and McElhenney bought the team in 2020.
 ?? ?? American interest in underdog clubs such as Wrexham is not unusual, with 22 of the 72 teams in the English Football League pyramid — the Championsh­ip, League One, and League Two — boasting some form of U.S. investment. But Wrexham’s Hollywood ascent from semi-pro to just two steps away from the Premier League makes for a truly compelling story.
American interest in underdog clubs such as Wrexham is not unusual, with 22 of the 72 teams in the English Football League pyramid — the Championsh­ip, League One, and League Two — boasting some form of U.S. investment. But Wrexham’s Hollywood ascent from semi-pro to just two steps away from the Premier League makes for a truly compelling story.

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