McDowell-White’s classmates always knew White simply as McDowell-White’s father — except when a new kid arrived. “They would freak out on who my dad was,” McDowell-White says.
To McDowell-White, his dad was a friend and role model, almost like “another brother.”
It comes as little surprise then that McDowell-White fashioned his free-flowing, dynamic style of play in basketball after his father’s manner on the pitch. The Brisbane Lions’ website describes White as a “genius utility” who provided the club with “countless moments of freakish athleticism and sheer exhilaration.” In other words: He was constant fun.
Similarly, when McDowell-White gets going, there’s no telling how a fast break might end: in a dunk, with a behind-the-back pass, with a pull-up three.
“His speed is like nothing I’ve seen before,” Master’s center Tim Soares says of McDowell-White.
Says head coach Kelvin Starr, also an Australia native, “His motor does not stop, and he’s good for multiple highlight plays every time he steps on the floor.”
White sees similarities between the way he approached competition and the way McDowell-White does.
“He’s quick, tough, and he has a good IQ and feel for the game,” White says. “He has a great vertical, and he’s a selfless player.” White added that, like himself, his son appreciates his team’s fans because that’s the “real heartbeat of sport.”
McDowell-White certainly aims to entertain. He describes his chase-down blocks, improbable offensive rebounds and daring passes as “calculated chaos.”
“I try to be electrifying,” McDowell-White says. “But at the same time, I try to be poised. So it’s a hard balance to find.”