Can someone school me on reclassifying? | The Boneyard

Can someone school me on reclassifying?

Status
Not open for further replies.

8893

Curiouser
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
29,845
Reaction Score
96,452
I've seen it discussed and happening increasingly in recent years, and I know it's what Drummond did when he came here. But I've never really understood it. How/why/when is it an option to do this and spend one less year in high school and enter college a year early?
 
No - generally it's a kid who is on target to graduate a year after his chronological class.

By reclassifying, they've done enough course work to catch back up to their original date of graduation.
 
No - generally it's a kid who is on target to graduate a year after his chronological class.

By reclassifying, they've done enough course work to catch back up to their original date of graduation.
Thank you. That makes more sense than what I thought it was.
 
No - generally it's a kid who is on target to graduate a year after his chronological class.

By reclassifying, they've done enough course work to catch back up to their original date of graduation.
Does that mean if a student is eligible they 'always' do it? In other words is it always done, or are there other determining factors on why a kid would not reclassify if the option is there?
 
Does that mean if a student is eligible they 'always' do it? In other words is it always done, or are there other determining factors on why a kid would not reclassify if the option is there?

Kids who are working to get offers from better schools will often wait the extra year, as that gives them an additional year of physical development and improved skills/coaching/habits if they use it properly. For a guy like Murray, it doesn't make sense to wait since everyone wants him already.
 
Does that mean if a student is eligible they 'always' do it? In other words is it always done, or are there other determining factors on why a kid would not reclassify if the option is there?

No, they do not always do it - generally, there's additional course work to be taken and some kids just prefer to stay where they are and hit college as a more mature player/person.

It's fairly common for athletes to stay back a year early on - the extra year allows them mature more and presumably gain more interest from colleges down the road. (I think that's rampant in some sports like lacrosse.) In basketball, you frequently have an inner city kid who might not be attending the best school and when that kid's talent become apparent, they'll transfer to a better school or a prep.

Take Shabazz Napier.

He attended Charlestown in Boston Public system. Not the worst school, but low college-readiness scores, etc.

After his sophomore year, he transferred to Lawrence Prep. They evaluated his transcript and enrolled him as a sophomore. When UConn offered in what was his junior year, he already had nearly four years of credits accumulated and it was just a matter of taking additional coursework in the summer and successfully passing the standardized tests.

Now, if he had been reclassified as a sophomore and none of his previous sophomore year work was acceptable, he would have had no chance at reclassifying.

Andre Drummond was a different case - he was completely eligible as a high school senior, but his mother wanted him to prep for a year before college. In that instance, his recruiting "class" was an artificial distinction. He didn't reclassify, he just changed his mind.
 
Check with Bruce Jenner, who seems to be reclassifying late in the game,
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Online statistics

Members online
284
Guests online
5,166
Total visitors
5,450

Forum statistics

Threads
163,996
Messages
4,377,955
Members
10,169
Latest member
ctfb19382


.
..
Top Bottom