- Sport: basketball
- Team: Dallas Mavericks
- Position: power forward
- Nationality: USA

- Birth date: 1985-04-30 (23 years)
- Place of birth: Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
Brandon Bass is a Power Forward playing professional basketball with the Dallas Mavericks in the National Basketball Association. He wears the number 32 jersey and is 6 feet 8 inches tall weighing in at 240 lbs.
Brandon Bass did his schooling from the Capitol high School in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He later attended the Louisiana State University where he played basketball for the college basketball team called the Louisiana State University Tigers where he won the Southeastern Conference Player of the Year Award in 2005. In 2005, Bass was drafted by the New Orleans/ Oklahoma City Hornets. After playing for two seasons with the Hornets and amassing 100 points, Bass signed with the Dallas Mavericks in 2008.
In a total of 129 games that Bass has played in the NBA to date, he averages at 5.9 points per game, 0.5 assists per game and 3.6 rebounds per game. His career best of 8.3 points per game came through in the 2007-08 season with the Dallas Mavericks where he played 79 games starting in one game.
Career Highlights
Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball, Player of the Year, 2005.

Brandon Bass did his schooling from the Capitol high School in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He later attended the Louisiana State University where he played basketball for the college basketball team called the Louisiana State University Tigers where he won the Southeastern Conference Player of the Year Award in 2005. In 2005, Bass was drafted by the New Orleans/ Oklahoma City Hornets. After playing for two seasons with the Hornets and amassing 100 points, Bass signed with the Dallas Mavericks in 2008.
In a total of 129 games that Bass has played in the NBA to date, he averages at 5.9 points per game, 0.5 assists per game and 3.6 rebounds per game. His career best of 8.3 points per game came through in the 2007-08 season with the Dallas Mavericks where he played 79 games starting in one game.
Career Highlights
Southeastern Conference Men’s Basketball, Player of the Year, 2005.

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