Tony Bradley, who admittedly didn't have that big of a role, which kind of reinforces my point.Who did UNC have that was a one and done? Wasn't Jackson a sophmore?
And Jackson was actually a junior
Tony Bradley, who admittedly didn't have that big of a role, which kind of reinforces my point.Who did UNC have that was a one and done? Wasn't Jackson a sophmore?
ah, thought your point was that they had one and dones that helped them to the title last year, which really wasn't the caseTony Bradley, who admittedly didn't have that big of a role, which kind of reinforces my point.
And Jackson was actually a junior
I actually hope that this is the start of a real minor league system where players sign out of high school if they want to. Then the NCAA ought to step in and do something about the transfer stuff. Sitting for a year doesn't seem to be enough. It's like free agent signing period each spring. Maybe require transfers to lose the year they sit out.
Do you happen to know if baseball players are allowed to be paid by their pro clubs while they're in college? That has always been the optimal settlement in my mind, where guys can be drafted straight out of high school and then stashed by their employers in college while they develop. I'm fairly certain that's how it works in hockey, but I'm not familiar with the specifics.
This is good for the game. It won't hurt Duke. As much as I can't stand him, K can coach. Kentucky I think will have a more difficult adjustment. And overall it will get a bunch of kids and hangers on who have neither interest nor business being in college but are basically looking for a place to get to hang for a year out of the business. I'm guessing that over time the number of players going directly out of high school drops since there will be many flame outs and guys whose handlers feed them big dreams but don't end up in the NBA. So they end up playing in front of 2000 in Portland Maine or somewhere.
This would have far more of a negative impact on the players than the current system (although I would like it as a fan).
I also don't understand why people act like 18 is less arbitrary an age than any other for a player to become draft eligible. Is it because they are legally an adult? Because the age requirement wouldn't seem to be any different to me than requiring a prospective employee to have a college degree for a different business. There is the caveat that these players are being hired by the franchise and not the league, but that's the point of the CBA - if the owners collectively bargain to postpone the moment of truth in an effort to improve their accuracy in identifying players, I can't fault them for that.
That's a false dichotomy.Personally I have no problem with the transfers. Real students can transfer any time they feel like it and IMO student atthletes should too.
That's a false dichotomy.
The difference is typical students pay to go to college. Even then they could suffer penalties that increase their investment
BB players get compensated for it and a school invests a lot of money in the kid,
Even before the kid steps one foot on campus thousands could already be invested.
Transfers can also be dings against APR. which may result in financial damage to an institution.
That's a false dichotomy.
The difference is typical students pay to go to college. Even then they could suffer penalties that increase their investment
BB players get compensated for it and a school invests a lot of money in the kid,
Even before the kid steps one foot on campus thousands could already be invested.
Transfers can also be dings against APR. which may result in financial damage to an institution.
I didn't mind Daniels leaving when he did. His stock was unlikely to improve after another year, and he had a shot to get paid while he developed. Might not have worked out as he'd hoped, but I certainly don't blame him.I never really liked the one and done thing. For those who went to UConn, Andree Drummond being the only one and done and Rudy gay being a two and done, I never developed a connection with them like I did with Napier, Boatright, Walker, Toby Kimball, Wes Bialosuknia and Art Quimby, among quite a few others. If the only way for us to win a championship is with 1 and dones, I would just as soon pass. These players have no loyalty or attachment to the school, only to themselves, so I have no attachment to them.
Let everyone go to the NBA right out of high school. Those that do not, do not draft them until they are 21 or juniors in college. This would work great in my opinion.
Further it is quite clear that the 1 and dones are not student athletes; they are athletes who are attending college because they are too young for the NBA. Which means that colleges are just farm teams for professional basketball and the athletes are not really there to get an education. But, we knew that. Even if the NCAA won't admit it. Why do universities allow themselves to be used in this way?
Two players who left too early, DHam after 2 years and DeAndre Daniels after 3, saw those dollar signs in their eyes but they were not ready and they have not done very well in professional basketball.
Coach K isnt going anywhere but youre spot on with Squid. Hes been able to cover his coaching deficiencies with the best recruiting classes the game has ever seen year after year. The gravy train ends for him when the NBA lets high school kids into the league again.If this means that The Squid will have to do some coaching and scratching for players that won't step in and be the top players out of HS. Gut tells me this may be the beginning of the end for The Squid and he will go into some executive type position in the pros claiming college burnout. While I believe that K can better handle this, he may also hit the road. This will definitely bring the playing field into a more balanced level.
We'll see if any of this comes to life.
The NCAA could stop this 1-done crap if it wanted to but it doesn't. They pretend thAt there is nothing they can do. But if they didn't let you reuse a scholarship for 2 years suddenly coaches would be more careful about who they recruited. Let's face it, if Cal knew he'd have to go two years with 8 scholarships or maybe even a year with 6 and 1 with 8 he would not be as inclined to land all those 1 year wonders.
That idea basically destroys the transfer market.
Think of the effect of kids transferring after their frosh year (not declaring for draft) or grad transfers.
Hard pass on that.
These are adults. They are student athletes. Not employees. How about we treat them as such?
I thought it was clearly defined as guys going pro. Anyone who transfers is staying in college so doesn't count against you. Nor kids who take a year off or what have you.
This has nothing to do with how you treat the kids. It's about creating the best possible on the floor product, by promoting compete balance and continuity. Jmo
It has everything to do with how you treat the kids. It's their lives. You operate a monopoly (which is a whole separate issue), and these kids are the ones who suffer.
Continuity is overrated. Kids have been leaving early in bunches for literally decades now.
If you're gonna let a cam Johnson go to unc then there's no point in trying to tell kids when they can and when they can't get paid.
but not have a beerIf an 18 yr old can decide to go to war he can decide to go to the NBA