He transferred from Michigan to Missouri after his freshman year, which included the basketball scandal, for unrelated reasons.
[3] He was also named Detroit News/Detroit Free Press first-team (known as Dream Team) All-State for both his junior and senior seasons.
[6] He was part of one of the most star-studded McDonald's All-American classes with future NBA All-stars Vince Carter, Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Stephon Marbury, Antawn Jamison, Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, and Chauncey Billups.
[7] During the tenth anniversary of his Street & Smith 1994–95 High School All-America Team, eight of the twenty members were still playing in the NBA.
[10] He was not among the players called before the grand jury (Robert Traylor, Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Maurice Taylor, and Louis Bullock)[9] and was not found to have received large amounts of money.
[4][18] That season he helped the Missouri Tigers snap the Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team's 35 game home conference winning streak which had extended from February 20, 1994, to January 1999.
[19] That season he was twice named Big 12 men's basketball player of the week and made the official All-Big 12 first team.
[20][28] Many other underclassmen in his draft year such as Ron Artest, Richard Hamilton, and Corey Maggette have gone on to have successful NBA careers.
[33] During the 2001–02 he spent part of the year with the USBL's Oklahoma Storm and the Brighton Bears of the British Basketball League (BBL).
[33] During the 2002–03 regular season as a member of the Rockford Lightning, he finished fourth in the CBA in scoring and seventh in offensive rebounds.
[38] He has also played in the National Superior Basketball of Puerto Rico, Liga Profesional de Baloncesto (LPB) of Venezuela and in various leagues in Italy.
[31] On October 21, 2011, it was announced that White had made the final twelve-man roster for the National Basketball League of Canada's London Lightning.