Education
Homewood-Flossmoor High School.
Homewood-Flossmoor High School.
He played at the point guard position. A high quality floor general, McDonald played for top European teams like Montepaschi Siena, Olimpija Ljubljana, Maccabi Tel Aviv, Panathinaikos, Akasvayu Girona, and Dynamo Moscow. McDonald began his high school career at Homewood-Flossmoor High School outside of Chicago.
He averaged 24 points on 63% field-goals, and 10 assists per game.
After two years at Homewood-Flossmoor, McDonald"s family moved to Raleigh, North Carolina. McDonald took his new high school, Athens Drive High School, to the final four in North Carolina.
In the fall of 1989, McDonald arrived at the University of Minnesota. In his first year of college, McDonald was red-shirted.
He and the Gophers greatly improved over the next four years, winning the 1993 National Institute of Technology and reaching the second round of the 1994 National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament in McDonald"s senior year.
McDonald began his career in Europe playing for small teams like Castors Braine (Belgium) and Interier Krško (Slovenia). After his time in Interier Krsko he was taken to the top Slovenian basketball club: Olimpija Ljubljana. McDonald"s next stop was Maccabi Tel Aviv.
Soon McDonald became very famous in Israel, and together with Nate Huffman and Anthony Parker turned Maccabi into one of the best European basketball teams.
One of McDonald"s claims to fame in Israel was a Burger King commercial in which he said: "Listen to McDonald - only Burger King". McDonald played 139 games, scoring 1,606 points for Maccabi Tel Aviv in three years.
Finally, he said goodbye and moved to one of Maccabi"s biggest rivals: Panathinaikos. With Panathinaikos, McDonald put up solid numbers and also 19 points in the first game he played against his former team Maccabi Tel Aviv.
McDonald played for Akasvayu Girona in the Spanish ACB League from season 2005-2006 up until July 2008.
Then he returned to Dynamo Moscow, for which he had previously played with in the 2004-2005 season. He played with Slovenia"s senior national team at the International Basketball Federation EuroBasket 2001. After playing for two years in Slovenia, McDonald became a Slovenian citizen in June 1997.
Currently, McDonald is a high school basketball coach at Providence Academy in Plymouth, Minnesota. Slovenian League: 1997, 1998, 1999.
McDonald was also a member of the senior men"s Slovenian national basketball team