Posted on 03/20/2018 8:08:43 AM PDT by rktman
They [the NCAA] just got a contract from CBS (and TNT), $8.8 billion, and if you are making that, I think you have to share some revenue. You cant expect people to continue to work for nothing on a false hope of, well this is about education, we are getting you an education, we will feed you. It sounds a little like 400 years ago, like slavery. Stay in your hut. Stay in that little house. Well give you some food. You do all of the work. All of it. And I am telling you that I will take care of you."
(Excerpt) Read more at newsbusters.org ...
The NBA has a developmental league similar to the farm system in baseball. You can be 18 to participate.
There are nine different paths a player can take to the NBA G League:
NBA teams can assign players to their NBA G League affiliate and recall them at any time.
NBA teams can sign players with four years of service or fewer to two-way contracts, allowing them to retain their rights while the player spends the bulk of the season in the NBA G League.
NBA teams can draft players and sign them to NBA G League contracts, thus retaining their rights through the Draft Rights Player rule.
NBA teams can designate up to four players that they cut during training camp as affiliate players, meaning those players will join that teams NBA G League affiliate (should the players choose to sign into the NBA G League). These players are signed under contract with the league rather than the team, however, meaning they are technically free agents who can be called up to any of the 30 NBA teams.
NBA G League teams hold local tryouts each offseason and can invite up to five players from these tryouts to their training camps.
The NBA G League holds a draft every year consisting of nearly 200 players who have signed contracts with the league. In 2016, the draft consisted of six rounds.
Players who return to the NBA G League are, by rule, re-acquired by the teams that they played for within the last two seasons (Returning Players).
Once the NBA G League season begins, players who sign NBA G League contracts are placed into a rotating waiver pool so that teams can claim them.
If a player from high school, college or overseas enters the NBA G League without ever having declared for the NBA Draft, he will also join the waiver pool. That player remains NBA Draft-eligible but is not eligible to be called up to the NBA.
Karl Malone went to LA TECH. Moses went directly from Petersburg (Virginia) High School to the the NBA. Same high school as KU's Frank Mason.
Top pros who went directly from HS to the NBA:
Kobe Bryant
Lebron James
Moses Malone
Kevin Garnett
Dwight Howard
Tracy McGrady
Shawn Kemp
Amare Stoudemire
Monta Ellis
Darryl Dawkins
The next step is to find a way to make it worth the while of teenage stars-in-waiting to play in the G League for a year or two instead of signing on with a college program. Silver explicitly mentioned the fact that the G League already allows 18 year olds but that the NBA hasnt pushed that option to high-end prospects.
Few players have used the G League in place of college; in fact, playing professionally overseas has been a more frequent option for the best prospects who choose not to attend college while waiting out the NBA draft eligibility.
Now that the G League is reaching its potential, the solution is staring the NBA in its face: Abolish the age minimum, but allow teams drafting 18 year olds to keep their salaries off the books by assigning them to their G League affiliate for the season. The young players would still earn salaries as assigned by the rookie scale (and their contract clocks would start), but it would only count against the NBA teams salary cap sheet if the players in question are in the NBA.
This allows the NBA to have a stronger hand in player development without forcing teams to lock up roster spots and salary slots for young prospects who arent ready for the big leagues. Prospects would be able to bypass the college charade and get truly professional training (albeit in less glamorous conditions than experienced by full-on NBA or high-level college players).
Another reason we homeschool!
I take it you’re in Texas, too.
Florida here... I grew up in a New England state (high school soccer and lacrosse is the sports there) and our football stadium was a few benches (maybe the capacity was 1,000 if that)
Well here in Texas, we’ve got High School Stadiums that surpass a lot of College Football stadiums.
Duke offers a basketball camp under the umbrella of a university. I am sure they meet the NCAA minimums, but it is laughable to believe they meet the academic standards of the rest of the student body.
And the kid who’s got nothing but a skill people pay hundreds of millions of dollars for...he accepts a sandwich from the wrong guy and the kid gets kicked off the team, kicked out of school? Yeah, that makes sense.
If he has the skill, he will get hundreds of millions of dollars in the pros. Being kicked off the high school or college team for getting a sandwich from the wrong guy will not hurt him if he has the skill you say he has.
So he should play for free for two, three years while the college makes tens of millions of dollars off him?
Ok. Sure. /s
His choice. If he is good enough, he can play internationally or be picked up by the NBAs G League. The college is picking up the tab for $60K a year along with coaching him and giving him a national platform to display his wares.
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