Background
Mann was born in Carthage, Mississippi to parents Annie Mann Gray and Jim Banks, Junior. and was a very active member in his Baptist church while growing up.
Mann was born in Carthage, Mississippi to parents Annie Mann Gray and Jim Banks, Junior. and was a very active member in his Baptist church while growing up.
Mann attended South Leake High School where he was noted for both his athletic and academic abilities – he graduated as his class"s salutatorian and was named a top five basketball player in the state of Mississippi.
Community college
Mann was awarded a scholarship to play basketball at East Central Community College. During his two-year career he averaged approximately 21 points and 12 rebounds per game. Mann then signed a full athletic scholarship to play his remaining two seasons of National Collegiate Athletic Association eligibility at Mississippi Valley State University.
Later in life, Mann would also get inducted into ECCC"s Academic and Athletic Halls of Fame.
Mississippi Valley State
During the 1994-1995 and 1995-1996 seasons, Mann"s two at MVSU, he appeared in 56 total games while averaging 19.3 points and 12.7 rebounds per game. During his senior season he guided the Delta Devils to a school record 22–7 record, a share of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) regular season title, the SWAC Tournament championship and MVSU"s third-ever berth into the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Tournament.
In June 1996, one month after graduating magna cum laude, the Golden State Warriors selected him as the 11th pick in the second round (40th overall) in the National Basketball Association Draft. Between the National Basketball Association Draft and the first days of the Warriors" training camp, Mann"s desire to play basketball faded away.
He felt that he had a higher calling in life, which was working with children as a Baptist minister.
On October 31, the day before the Warriors were set to open their season against the Los Angeles Clippers, Mann told the organization that he did not want to play professional basketball and that it would be unfair to both himself and the team to keep going. Golden State released him, and Mann was no longer an National Basketball Association player. He sacrificed, minimally, the $220,000 rookie salary along with the glamour of an National Basketball Association lifestyle to pursue what he called his "calling.".