I'm hoping it DOES affect Duke, AND everyone else!I am convinced that it won't affect Duke. Scheyer and the basketball program are always one step ahead of everyone else so he'll figure it out.
My hope is that it will affect places like Kentucky, where they wait until the last minute and the player decides to go pro. But there will always be one and done regardless, it just wont be mandated by the NBA.I'm hoping it DOES affect Duke, AND everyone else!
OFC
They can still go to college. They will just have to pay, like the rest of us. Or get a student loan, which, hopefully, Biden won't be around to forgive.They are looking to drop the age to 18, which it should be. With that being said, there is not 30, 18 year olds that will be league ready out of high school. You will see a lot of the ones that get bad advice out the league for not being ready like most of the OAD’s that don’t pan out .
I think the league and NCAA should come to an agreement. If a kid is drafted late second round or not at all they should be allowed to return to college eligibility.They can still go to college. They will just have to pay, like the rest of us. Or get a student loan, which, hopefully, Biden won't be around to forgive.
OFC
And then leave after one year? No thank you.I think the league and NCAA should come to an agreement. If a kid is drafted late second round or not at all they should be allowed to return to college eligibility.
No but you can’t make them stay either. How ever the downside to this is that the gleague negates having to come back to school.And then leave after one year? No thank you.
OFC
They are looking to drop the age to 18, which it should be. With that being said, there is not 30, 18 year olds that will be league ready out of high school. You will see a lot of the ones that get bad advice out the league for not being ready like most of the OAD’s that don’t pan out .
You can’t do 20. IMO, your forcing guys to have to choose to go to college who already don’t want to be there for the one year . Gleague ignite and overtime elite are options for kids to wait until they go to the draft but at 18, you can sign in to the military so I’m fine with 18 .I think it's going to be bad for college basketball. We're still going to have OAD's, plenty of DJ Steward's out there, but we won't get the benefit and excitement of the elite level guys like Paolo and Zion. It's not going to be like pre-2006, we'll see way more guys jumping out high school than we did back then. I don't think we'll see guys on the level of AJ Griffin and Trevor Keels in college. I would like to see the age limit moved to 20, especially now with NIL and more "minor league" professional options like the G League Ignite and Overtime Elite.
Because there won’t be thirty high schoolers drafted. When you look at the OAD and upper class men and European players that will also declare. So that pushes a number of the ones who will declare into the second round . I do believe there are atleast five high school players going to college every year who are ready for the pace of the league and the grind . Not many after that .It's been a while since being "league ready" mattered. We've seen guys who were not league ready leave after one or two years so I don't see why we shouldn't expect guys to jump out of high school even if they aren't league ready, whether from bad advice or an over-inflated sense of their skill level.
Because there won’t be thirty high schoolers drafted. When you look at the OAD and upper class men and European players that will also declare. So that pushes a number of the ones who will declare into the second round . I do believe there are atleast five high school players going to college every year who are ready for the pace of the league and the grind . Not many after that .
Well I'm not so sure that it's a good thing we allow 18 year old kids into the military, we mostly do it because they are the members of society that typically don't know what direction they want to go in and are full of enough anger and stupidity. Our military academies, however, seem to be a positive thing and provide that necessary time buffer for further maturation and training.You can’t do 20. IMO, your forcing guys to have to choose to go to college who already don’t want to be there for the one year . Gleague ignite and overtime elite are options for kids to wait until they go to the draft but at 18, you can sign in to the military so I’m fine with 18 .
Lol Brandon Jennings isn’t even in the league no more. The same Brandon Jennings that gave the interview stating ,” Making the decision to go over seas was one of the worst decisions in my life !”.Well I'm not so sure that it's a good thing we allow 18 year old kids into the military, we mostly do it because they are the members of society that typically don't know what direction they want to go in and are full of enough anger and stupidity. Our military academies, however, seem to be a positive thing and provide that necessary time buffer for further maturation and training.
Nobody is forcing them to go to college. The NBA does not have a requirement that a player has to play one year of NCAA basketball to be eligible for the draft. They don't even actually have to finish high school to be eligible. They just have to be 19 years old.
We have seen many players over the last 15 years choose not to go to college even with the 19 year old age limit and they have done quite well going all the way back to Brandon Jennings. They have plenty of options outside of college and even outside of G-League Ignite and Overtime Elite. We're also starting to see players leave high school early to pursue professional opportunities. They don't even have to play traditional organized basketball.
I've never really understood the whole 18 to sign up for the military argument. If that's the point, why not let kids at 18 go straight to the NFL. I've never heard anyone disagree with that rule. Yes, it's physical and dangerous for 18 year olds, but so is the military.You can’t do 20. IMO, your forcing guys to have to choose to go to college who already don’t want to be there for the one year . Gleague ignite and overtime elite are options for kids to wait until they go to the draft but at 18, you can sign in to the military so I’m fine with 18 .
I’ve never understood any of it but at the end of the day NFL, NBA, MLB are all businesses and all are unionized so these rules aren’t just put in place by owners but players as well.I've never really understood the whole 18 to sign up for the military argument. If that's the point, why not let kids at 18 go straight to the NFL. I've never heard anyone disagree with that rule. Yes, it's physical and dangerous for 18 year olds, but so is the military.
But we’re not talking about football. We’re talking on the argument being made about basketball. No one brought football up. These are two very different physical sports. The Military argument was brought up in the last NBA CBA . Where as it’s not the owners it’s the players wanting the rule not to change to protect veterans playing careers.There is no good answer. So let the really good ones go straight to the nba. Maybe have some scouts analyze, and offer a certain amount of kids to make the jump. All others must do a minimum of 1 year in college, or whatever.
Bringing up the “well an 18 year old can go into the military, so let them go pro” is comparing an apple to a bowling ball. The military trains them to go from a boy to a man. Pro sports don’t. Put the best 18 year old high school football player up against a pro football player, and he’ll get his brains beat in.
I realize basketball is the topic, which is why I gave my opinion on that. Like I said, there is no good answer.But we’re not talking about football. We’re talking on the argument being made about basketball. No one brought football up. These are two very different physical sports. The Military argument was brought up in the last NBA CBA . Where as it’s not the owners it’s the players wanting the rule not to change to protect veterans playing careers.
But in all fairness and I don’t have the right answer at 18 we basically are telling these kids they are young men and women . There is no right or wrong answer here. It is my opinion that some kids are ready, they adapt quicker . Then there are late bloomers and the ones that flame out once they realize the length and grind of an 82 game season. In the end it’s their choice , no one else’s. You’d love to see them play college ball but they are only going to be around the one year and still bounce for the league after .Well, my bad. I'm not really making an argument for the NFL, just making the point that saying "if an 18 year can go to the military..." then basically we are saying that an 18 year old should be able to do anything, and I don't think it necessarily fits for everything.