Roi Sumang

Filipino basketball player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shej Roi Sumang[1] (born December 12, 1990) is a Filipino professional basketball player for the Titan Ultra Giant Risers of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).

PositionPoint guard
LeaguePBA
Born (1990-12-12) December 12, 1990 (age 35)
Tondo, Manila, Philippines
NationalityFilipino
Quick facts No. 12 – Titan Ultra Giant Risers, Position ...
Roi Sumang
Sumang with GlobalPort Batang Pier in 2015
No. 12 Titan Ultra Giant Risers
PositionPoint guard
LeaguePBA
Personal information
Born (1990-12-12) December 12, 1990 (age 35)
Tondo, Manila, Philippines
NationalityFilipino
Listed height5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Listed weight160 lb (73 kg)
Career information
High schoolLetran (Manila)
CollegeUE
PBA draft2015: 3rd round, 26th overall pick
Drafted byGlobalPort Batang Pier
Playing career2015–present
Career history
2015–2016GlobalPort Batang Pier
2016–2020Blackwater Elite
2021Nueva Ecija Rice Vanguards
2022–2023NorthPort Batang Pier
2023Nueva Ecija Rice Vanguards
2024Abra Weavers
2025Zamboanga Sikat
2025–presentTitan Ultra Giant Risers
Career highlights
Medals
Men's basketball
Philippines
SEA Games
Gold medal – first place2013 NaypyidawTeam
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Early life

He is the eldest of six children of Jess and Sheila Sumang. He grew up in the streets of Tondo, and already played basketball when he was a kid. He played for the Letran Squires in high school, where he became teammates with future PBA player Kevin Alas. He attended tryouts in Ateneo and San Beda, but he chose UE upon the proddings of former UE star and current PBA player Paul Lee, a fellow Tondo native. He dropped out of high school and was an out-of-school youth for two years playing pickup basketball games in different places, but his father convinced him to go back to school and play varsity ball.[1]

College career

Sumang first played for the UE Red Warriors in 2011.[2] In his rookie year, he only averaged 5.2 points, 3.4 rebounds and 2.8 assist per game. The next season, he was one of the league leaders in several categories: third in scoring average (18.4 ppg), second in assists (4.9 apg), and fifth in steals (1.4 spg). In 2013, he increased his scoring average to 19.33 ppg, second in the league behind season MVP Terrence Romeo.[3] He was included in the Mythical 5 selection for that same year.[4] When Derrick Pumaren took the coaching reins for the Red Warriors in 2014, his scoring average dipped down to 13.0 points per outing, and was always at odds with his new coach.[5] At one point, he was benched by Pumaren for leaving the school’s quarters without permission,[6] and was relegated to come off the bench after he lost his starting spot to Dan Alberto.[7] In 2015, he elected to skip his fifth and final playing year in the UAAP, and instead saw action in the PBA D-League team, Tanduay Light Rhum Masters and opted to apply for the draft later that year.[8]

Professional career

Sumang was projected to be taken as early as the first round in different mock drafts,[9][10] but to everyone's surprise, he was drafted in the third round (26th overall) by the GlobalPort Batang Pier in the 2015 PBA draft.[11] His late selection in the draft drew reactions from fans, and was the top trending topic on Twitter that day.[12] A few days later, he signed a two-year multi-million contract with GlobalPort.[13] He and Rain or Shine guard and fellow UE alumnus Paul Lee shared the same agent and adviser in coach Lawrence Chongson. He is the team's third-string point guard, playing behind Terrence Romeo and Stanley Pringle.

PBA career statistics

More information Legend ...
Legend
  GP Games played  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field-goal percentage  3P%  3-point field-goal percentage  FT%  Free-throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
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As of the end of 2022–23 season[14]

Season-by-season averages

More information Year, Team ...
Year Team GP MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2015–16 GlobalPort 348.5.405.306.6151.0.6.4.03.6
Blackwater
2016–17 Blackwater 2919.9.432.317.8402.02.8.8.09.0
2017–18 Blackwater 3016.1.391.293.7562.02.5.7.06.8
2019 Blackwater 3623.7.432.295.7972.74.11.3.27.9
2020 Blackwater 1125.2.409.222.8004.34.31.1.110.4
2021 NorthPort 528.3.484.286.8752.65.0.6.28.2
2022–23 NorthPort 3223.8.450.345.7023.44.41.0.08.8
Career 17719.1.426.308.7682.43.0.9.17.4
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References

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