The guy is 7’2”.Not sure on this one. The moneys def in the NBA. But he seems like a fun loving kid still perhaps not fully ready. Maybe come back and get one of those Lloyd’s of London insurance policies like the stars used to?
It’s obviously Donovan’s decision but imo staying is not in his long term best interest and I want and hope for the best for him above my selfish wants as a fan.The guy is 7’2”.
He can develop everything else he needs elsewhere. People need to let kids go and stop hoping kids stay around for a threepeat. He already got you 2.
The guy is 7’2”.
He can develop everything else he needs elsewhere. People need to let kids go and stop hoping kids stay around for a threepeat. He already got you 2.
Maybe it’s more attractive to some high level recruits to see a sure lottery pick want to continue playing for that program. Yeah, most of us see the big bucks. but you are talking about 19 or 20 year olds who will not be living the easiest life either for most of the year as a pro.The way he talked about how hard it would be not seeing Newton, Spencer and the other graduating players around the locker room anymore... mentally, Clingan may not have shifted into the mindset that he's leaving yet. We'll see if that means anything. Most of us would advise him to leave and take the bag, but again, it's not our place to tell him how to live his life. If he maintains college eligibility, he's entitled to use it if he wants to. What's Hurley gonna do, kick him off the team? That wouldn't be fair. You'd be forcing Donovan to do what you would do in that situation, partly because you think it makes your program look more attractive to spit out lottery picks as soon as they're viable.
There's also a chance that he's unsure about his physical stamina right now. He did have that foot injury.
I've seen one, maybe two people here say Clingan should stay at UConn because he's not ready for the NBA. Most of us think he should go pro, me included. But there are imaginable reasons why he might be wavering.The comments in these threads are astonishing. Thank god Clingan doesn’t have advisors from the BY, he’d be turning down tens of millions at a minimum to come back for absolutely no reason.
Thank you for weighing in. Your perspective is valuable on this. Sorry you had to go through that.I don’t disagree with anything said so far here, in principle.
I did lose a parent in high school though. I commuted to CCSU instead of going to any other school I’d been accepted to so I could help at home. It wasn’t really that though, I wasn’t ready to move away myself.
Donny still gets his haircut in Bristol. He’s only 20. We can’t put ourselves in his head based off the obvious financial advantages right now. Maybe he isn’t at the point he can live alone in Sacramento.
Ugh, this comment bugs me. Everyone who says he might not be emotionally ready to handle the NBA isn't secretly hoping he stays just so we can win again. Maybe some of us are actually capable of empathy. I'd be fine if he stayed, chose not to play basketball for a year so his foot could heal more, and then entered the NBA draft. I'd bet it would be a bad financial decision, but I'd be fine with it. I want him to do what's right for him.The guy is 7’2”.
He can develop everything else he needs elsewhere. People need to let kids go and stop hoping kids stay around for a threepeat. He already got you 2.
The only reality for not staying is the risk of serious injury. These guys are not going to diminish their draft status and pay day by staying in college another year.Let me preface this by saying I think DC will declare for the draft but I would understand if he loves his current life and wants to chase the unimaginable, A 3 peat with his roommate Alex. He's still going to make a ton of money before he retires.
I agree somewhat, but if hypothetically Clingan stays another year, he’s gonna need to start taking 3s. I think teams are drafting him with the potential that he can make 3s at least at a slightly below average rate for an NBA center. For a 3rd year in college and a year older, he’d need to start taking / making them.The only reality for not staying is the risk of serious injury. These guys are not going to diminish their draft status and pay day by staying in college another year.
Not for nothing.. but if I was in his camp, I'd have had an insurance policy for potentinal future earnings taken out in high school as soon as he committed for such a matter. I think he should go because he's ready and he's not really going to improve his draft stock any more than he already has by playing another year. But getting injured, while awful and would deprive him of getting to play professional sports.. I don't think loss of money from injury is as a big of a motivator people think it is. He may see what happened to Bouknight and want another year because the thinks he's not ready or mature enough. Who knows. All the staff and his family can do is give him the best information they can to make the best and most informed decision he can and then respect it.Given his history with foot injuries, he'd be much better off turning pro now than waiting another year and risking another injury that would make him less desirable to pro teams in 2025.