Sports | July 10, 2008 | 3 comments

Greedy, Why Wait? Why High School Ballers Are Over College

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AROC
In basketball today, the almighty dollar rules the world. Take young Brandon Jennings for example. One of the top high school players in the country has recently decided to skip college and go straight to the pros. Maybe your saying "Wait a second AROC, I thought high schoolers had to go to at least one year of college before going to the pros." Well you are correct my friend but only in the case of the NBA. This is not the case when it comes to playing professionally in places over seas where no such rules apply. "Ah yes AROC I think I know where you are going with this."

Over the past decade symptoms of foreign interest and involvement in the game of basketball have been growing. Before the year 2000 if I said "international basketball" you'd probably think "Tony Kucoc or Detlef Schremph?". The US has dominated the sport since its inception but now things are changing quickly. Yao Ming, Tony Parker, and Steve Nash are but a few of the foreigners that are among the best players in the league. The fact that the USA basketball team is even being questioned as the consensus pick to win the Olympics should be evidence enough to convince us all that the game is changing.

Back to Brandon Jennings. The NBA's policy is such that a player is not allowed to enter the NBA Draft straight out of high school. At first this seems like a great idea. Better players in the NCAA, more mature players in the NBA and happy fans across the boards. Besides the 1/1000 players that have a career changing injury in that one year of college everybody wins. Right? Problem is that the kids want or in a few cases need the money and don't want to wait it out. In this years NBA draft many players from overseas were questioning whether or not it was worth it to join a team that may not even garauntee them a spot on the roster. Rookie contracts in the NBA are also becoming a factor as non-NBA contracts continue to grow with the popularity of the sport. Some players might be able to find a more lucrative contracts abroad whereas the NBA limits the amount of money a rookie can make.

In the case of high schoolers like Jennings, possibly the best h.s. player in his class, the difference is very significant. A free year of schooling and college hoops at Arizona or hundreds of thousands of dollars and pro basketball overseas. Well Brandon Jennings has made his decision and will become the first player to give up his scholarship. Dorm rooms and textbooks? No Sir. He will likely play ball in Europe for a year, make a bundle of cash (hopefuly Euros for his sake) and watch college hoops from his apartment in Italy.

This will undoubtedly set the precedent for the future and could even lead to others following suit this year. The whole thing wreaks of Maurice Clarett but it does make sense and will probably work out better for the Jennings. The jig is up everyone. If it wasn't going to be Jennings then it was going to be somebody else. What remains to be seen/heard is the reaction from the NBA and NCAA chieftons who'd be smart to start figuring out a way to stop this from happening. If not, there could be two drafts next year and and a bunch of 6'9 kids signing up for Latin.
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3 comments // Greedy, Why Wait? Why High School Ballers Are Over College

  • MatthewLC
    • 0
      MatthewLC  
    • I give kudos to Jennings for his innovative way to bypass the college game and earn bucks. However, what does this kid really know about the European game? It has been evident for sometime that the US has dropped as the clear cut #1 in the world. Much of this having to do with the one on one-ball dominated style of play popular in the US, as opposed to the team oriented style of play in Euro-leagues.

      Not only will he have trouble being accepted and adapting to the European way of life, but he will be playing against even more skilled competition than the NCAA could offer. Additionally, as a Diaper Dandy on the Arizona Wildcats, he could have been the teams feature player (See Derrick Rose this years #1 NBA Draft Pick).

      I think he can learn a lot from the Euro Leagues, but my prediction is that the transition will be too great to overcome in his first year. With pockets that heavy, my guess is that he wont mind sitting on the bench in Europe.

      Overall, I think he is making the wrong move and sacrificing next years draft stock. Dominate the NCAA for one year then collect your riches. You have waited 18 years to get paid, 1 more wont kill you.

      And one more point to add.Those players drafted out of the Foreign Leagues to become All Stars in the NBA have one thing in common. They were FOREIGNERS!

    • 3 years ago
  • idle_eyes
  • rabidlemur
    • 0
      rabidlemur  
    • Without a college education what are these young men going to do after basketball, or what if it doesn't work out for them? You need only look at Mike Vick, Tim Couch and other young athletes at the top of the world one week and rock bottom the next to know why fame and fortune are short and sometimes painful.

      A fully paid for college education is a hard thing to pass up, but I guess when millions are thrown at you, its easy to do =/

    • 3 years ago
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