I read somewhere there is discussion of going to a baseball-like format where you can go straight out of high school or go to college but you'd have to stay at least 2 years. I think that format absolutely benefits Duke. We would still get the best players who are going to college, but would get them for 2 or more seasons.
Agreed, coaches can learn to deal with it. Allow a kid the opportunity to get drafted. If that doesn’t happen he can return to school. Maybe you limit the amount of opportunities to do that, but i wouldn’t.The other important part of this rule be how long can kids stay in the draft and/or does the NBA implement a time table to commit to the draft? The problem in the past was never kids committing to the NBA. The issue for coaches came when they sign a kid in November and that kid “unexpectedly” decides to jump into the draft in May.
IMO players (international, high school and college) should be able to back out after the draft. Your amateurism shouldn’t be affected by being picked or not being picked, either without a contract.
Baseball is 3 years.I read somewhere there is discussion of going to a baseball-like format where you can go straight out of high school or go to college but you'd have to stay at least 2 years. I think that format absolutely benefits Duke. We would still get the best players who are going to college, but would get them for 2 or more seasons.
Grant Hill is on the committee reviewing this.
I don’t like the proposed change. The NBA simply needs to offer a real G League option that pays enough and offers enough exposure to attract the top 10 or so players coming out of high school. Then leave the 1 year after high school rule in place. Problem solved for everyone.
You can’t make kids stay in college 2 years. What if they flunk out? How do you handle that? Sometimes a guy blows up as a freshmen. Why restrict his pro potential? He’s gonna be even less likely to go to college.
This whole thing smells of money considerations. Just do the right thing for once.
I don’t think there should be any restriction what so ever. Go whenever you want. I do think there should be the opportunity for kids who declare out of HS to still go to school if they’re not drafted in the first round. There should also be a system in place for kids who don’t get drafted in the first round and left early, to come back. (Obviously if they haven’t hired an agent). I think the system should protect the kids more.
I disagree. Cal will still be targeting and landing some of the top kids going to college. For as much as I don't like him, the dude is an amazing salesman and will be landing top tier talent. How he develops players is a totally different story.I’m not worried at all about this! Coach K has proven to win without one and dones, but the elimination of the one and done rule might expose a certain coach out there though.
You're ignoring obvious differences in these sports. NFL has a 21 years old minimum to be under contract, so NCAA doesn't need to require any number of years. If NBA had a 21 year minimum, top h.s. prospects would play in Europe and problem mostly solved for NCAA. Also, NBA would never need to do that because there are plenty of 19/20 year olds who are ready to contribute in the NBA without the injury risk.Works fine for football and baseball in college! Three years.
To be drafted in baseball you have to be out of highschool, a junior college player, or have completed your junior year if at a four year school. There may be additional age restrictions, but that’s the gist. If drafted, can always choose to play in college instead. What I wonder is: can you drop out of a 4 year college after 1 season and get drafted the following year?Denver,
Just curious...how does baseball draft work? You seem to have a grasp of it. When a team drafts a kid can that kid still play college? I seem to remember a local guy getting drafted, very late mind you, then finishing his college career. How does that work? Is it like the old NBA rights?
As for everyone saying guys will just go to Europe. I mean, yes some would. But that is currently an option too, and very few take it. Euro ball and coaching and the whole system is very different from America. A lot of our top guys probably wouldn't enjoy it over there, especially for just a year or two. I work with high school boys, and at least 95% of them have no interest in living in Europe for any amount of time lol
It’s possible, but I don’t know how you would sell a top 10 high school recruit a chance to come play for uk when they can jump straight to the NBA and begin making millions.I disagree. Cal will still be targeting and landing some of the top kids going to college. For as much as I don't like him, the dude is an amazing salesman and will be landing top tier talent. How he develops players is a totally different story.
Grant Hill is on the committee reviewing this.
I don’t like the proposed change. The NBA simply needs to offer a real G League option that pays enough and offers enough exposure to attract the top 10 or so players coming out of high school. Then leave the 1 year after high school rule in place. Problem solved for everyone.
You can’t make kids stay in college 2 years. What if they flunk out? How do you handle that? Sometimes a guy blows up as a freshmen. Why restrict his pro potential? He’s gonna be even less likely to go to college.
This whole thing smells of money considerations. Just do the right thing for once.