Good for him. It's a much better decision that going to college for 1 year.
Completely agree. What's funny is the Syracuse fans ripping on the kid and telling him what an awful decision it is.
A non drafted g league player I think makes 26k max a year which isn't much but he will also hire an agent who will take care of him
Your first paragraph is so key to whole idea. Hundreds of thousands of teenage kids each thinking they have what it takes to get one of about 500 jobs. And "advisers" adding fuel to the fire. How will the kid respond if a respected talent evaluator looks them in the eye and tells them their not quite good enough. When they've probably never been told that in their life.I think this is a good idea, but I hope to hell that G-league employees are upfront with kids who want to pass on college but aren't good enough to make it.
Because it won't take many kids skipping college, washing out of the G-League, and ending up on Outside The Lines explaining that they're in prison for selling crack because they're broke to get the bleeding hearts bitching about "The Man" taking advantage of disadvantaged city kids.
If this becomes trend rather than anomaly, I'd bet you see first year salaries go way, way up.
Your first paragraph is so key to whole idea. Hundreds of thousands of teenage kids each thinking they have what it takes to get one of about 500 jobs. And "advisers" adding fuel to the fire. How will the kid respond if a respected talent evaluator looks them in the eye and tells them their not quite good enough. When they've probably never been told that in their life.
I think this is a good idea, but I hope to hell that G-league employees are upfront with kids who want to pass on college but aren't good enough to make it.
Because it won't take many kids skipping college, washing out of the G-League, and ending up on Outside The Lines explaining that they're in prison for selling crack because they're broke to get the bleeding hearts bitching about "The Man" taking advantage of disadvantaged city kids.
If this becomes trend rather than anomaly, I'd bet you see first year salaries go way, way up.
I don’t care.Why do we care so much about the well being and education of people we have never met? Let them go right after high school......If they figure it out, great.....if not so be it. Not everyone who makes this decision will be a cautionary tale.
Title ix, everyBODY gets paid!With the money involved now, I'm all for players getting compensated. But I'd hope it was a more formalized, structured arrangement, and not agents or boosters just giving kids bags of cash to attend their alma mater.
I wish basketball, football and baseball would adopt a system where a high school player, or an underclassman in college, could be drafted by the professional league, sign a pro contract with a signing bonus, but be allowed to stay in college.
For example, what if an NBA team saw pro potential in Joe Weiskamp. They could draft him in the second round, sign him to whatever signing bonus that would be equate to (say $200K) and he gets to play at Iowa as planned. It's a win for Iowa since they'd get a good player, the NBA team could monitor his progress easier if he's here in the states vs going to Europe for a couple years, and the player gets to play NCAA ball with some money in his bank account.
Same for football, what if an NFL team wanted to draft Epenesa this spring. He could sign with the team, cash in on a signing bonus, but stay at Iowa to further develop for the next couple of years.
I think this would be really beneficial for NCAA baseball. Imagine the talent in college if the best high school players could still get their signing bonuses but instead of bouncing around in minor leagues for 3-4 years, they get to enjoy the college life.
I'm sure this would never happen, but seems like the fairest way to get kids paid and still keep college sports filled with the best talent.
That's happening now with guys that go to college and don't make the NBA. There are former UNC-CHeat basketball players with bogus AFAM degrees, working on road crews or in jail.I think this is a good idea, but I hope to hell that G-league employees are upfront with kids who want to pass on college but aren't good enough to make it.
Because it won't take many kids skipping college, washing out of the G-League, and ending up on Outside The Lines explaining that they're in prison for selling crack because they're broke to get the bleeding hearts bitching about "The Man" taking advantage of disadvantaged city kids.
If this becomes trend rather than anomaly, I'd bet you see first year salaries go way, way up.
I agree, which is why I said what I did. People are looking at this as a solution, but until the NCAA stops trying to prevent kids from making any money playing sports this doesn’t do squat.That's happening now with guys that go to college and don't make the NBA. There are former UNC-CHeat basketball players with bogus AFAM degrees, working on road crews or in jail.