Mavraides went on to play for
Notre Dame from 1950 to 1953. At Notre Dame he played under head coach
Frank Leahy, who was the former line coach for the
Seven Blocks of Granite where Learhy coached Mavraides' high school coach Ray Riddick. Here, Mavraides played shoulder-to-shoulder with
Tackle Art Hunter,
Center Jim Schrader, and
Fullback Neil Worden as the main blockers for
Heisman Trophy winning
running back Johnny Lattner. During his sophomore year, Mavraides was instrumental in helping the Irish beat the 9-0
Rose Bowl bound
USC Trojans at home by recovering a late game fumble deep in Trojan territory. His senior year, the 1953 Notre Dame finished the season 9-0-1 and was runner up to the National Championship, and had an unprecedented 12 players drafted to
'54 NFL. Mavraides also finished his college career being ranked #1 in all
NCAA with 27pts in kick scoring. In the September 13th, 1954
Sports Illustrated article
Herman Hickman describes the 1953 Notre Dame Team by writing; Frankly, it's hard to see how any squad could lose such men as halfback Johnny Lattner, fullback Neil Worden, tackle Art Hunter, center Jim Schrader, and guard Menil Mavraides and still be a top-ranked team. Each was on some All-American or other. Lattner, Worden and Hunter were first-round Pro draft choices. Schrader was a second-round choice. Mavraides a third. But Notre Dame is not an ordinary football team, it's Notre Dame... Notre Dame doesn't lose two often. Before the start of the 1954 NFL season, Mavraides, joined four of his Fighting Irish classmates, in the 1954 summer classic
College All-Star Game, where they lost 31 to 6 to the
Detroit Lions in front of 93,000 fans. ==Later life==