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http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/06/opinion/06SHIE.html
May 6, 2004 OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR Why Not Go Pro? By DAVID SHIELDS SEATTLE — The decision by Sebastian Telfair, the basketball star from Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, to enter the N.B.A. draft is being met with the predictable finger-wagging. Following the Supreme Court's rejection of a plea by the football player Maurice Clarett to be allowed to enter the N.F.L. draft after his sophomore year at Ohio State, it's bound to strengthen the resolve of David Stern, the N.B.A. commissioner, to enact a minimum age requirement of 20 for his draft. "The reason I'm in favor of an age limit is not because young players can't play," Stern has said. "But I think it's better for them to stay in school." Better for whom? Some 80 percent of high schoolers drafted by the N.B.A. since 1995 became multimillionaires by the age of 21. Of the 29 prep stars who declared for the draft and hired an agent between 1975 and 2003, nine — including Kobe Bryant and Kevin Garnett — became stars, and all but three have had decent careers. And Telfair has already signed an endorsement contract with Adidas that he says will pay $15 million. Considering the relatively brief careers of professional athletes, teenagers who are good enough to play at the highest level should be able to exploit that market. The N.F.L.'s rule on underclassmen should be abolished, and the N.B.A. should be discouraged from adding an age limit. For the third consecutive year, the No. 1 pick in the N.B.A. draft will probably be a high-schooler — perhaps Dwight Howard of Atlanta. Seven of the first 10 players selected could be high schoolers. Most every N.B.A. team's director of personnel has said Telfair should go to college, but added that he would probably be a lottery pick — one of the first 13 players chosen and thus the recipient of a multimillion-dollar contract. I suspect the real reason the N.F.L. and N.B.A. don't want high schoolers and college underclassmen to play with their ball is that they don't want to jeopardize their relationship with National Collegiate Athletic Association, which serves as a sort of free minor league and unpaid promotional department for the pros. The N.C.A.A. is a multibillion-dollar business built on the talents of players who are often unqualified for or uninterested in being students and who benefit materially from the system only if they are among the few who turn professional. Teenage pros are hardly limited to football and basketball. In his first season of professional hockey, Wayne Gretzky was 18. The new star of Major League Soccer is 14-year-old Freddy Adu. John McEnroe turned pro after his freshman year at Stanford. Tiger Woods did so after his sophomore year. Venus Williams and her sister Serena left school in their early teens to play tennis. Gary Sheffield entered the major leagues at 19, as did Mickey Mantle. Most baseball players don't attend college, and few graduate. Only 22 percent of the players in the N.H.L. attended college. Yet there is never an outcry over youthful debuts in hockey, soccer, tennis, golf and baseball. Why not? Here's my guess: those sports are dominated by whites, while 78 percent of N.B.A. players and 65 percent of N.F.L. players are black. Americans are rightly shamed over our nation's racial history. But, perversely, in the sporting world this guilt seems to be expressed through a tendency for white people — coaches, sports writers and commissioners — to play guardian to black teenagers in a way they wouldn't think of doing to white ones. Sebastian Telfair is old enough to vote and to die for his country in war. He — along with his basketball and football peers — is old enough to get paid. David Shields is the author of "Body Politic: The Great American Sports Machine."
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9-11-01 http://www.fallenheroesfund.org/fallenheroes/index.php http://www.carydufour.com/marinemoms...llowribbon.jpg |
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Agree and Disagree
I agree that these players should have the ability to exploit their talents.
However, his conclusion that "Here's my guess: those sports are dominated by whites, while 78 percent of N.B.A. players and 65 percent of N.F.L. players are black." is ridiculous. He already made his argument and failed to draw the link. The leagues NBA and NFL don't want to jeopardize their relationship with NCAA. However, other sports where whites dominate are allowed to enter the professional level earlier. Ridiculous. The sports that he mentions have very little national interest at the college level. When was the last time a bracket went around your office for NCAA soccer, golf or tennis. Hockey is only really supported by certain northern states. And although baseball has a College World Series, that sport is supported more by minor league teams affiliates with the pros than the NCAA. So, if he can surmise that the NBA and NFL are protecting their relationships with the NCAA, then that is his answer and race is irrelevant.
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"referee the defense" |
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What happens to all the players that will not get drafted at all out of High School? Of course there are players that have been drafted, but what about those that are not first round draft pick?
Team sports are also much different than individual sports as well. When you have to get some camaraderie with other players, it is different when you are competing by yourself. Shaun Livingston from Peoria Central High School in Illinois has declared for the NBA and passes up his scholarship to Duke. This kid won the State Championship in Illinois, but struggled at times to score 15 points in a High School game. And he is going to have to compete against 12 other HS players and many college players to make it into the first round. Remember, they have not done the camps yet either. And that is where the real evaluation is going to be made. You stock can fall off greatly just by the NBA Evaluation held at Moody Bible College in Chicago alone. I can understand the opportunity to want to take that chance to make millions, but if you fail, you fail big. First Rounders are the only ones that are pretty much guaranteed to make the team. Second rounders often do not make the roster or get the millions at all. So basically you have to be the top 32 player to make a team. Out of all those players HS and college. I know we are going to see a few of those HS players not make it. Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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I absolutely do not buy the race card stuff the writer talks about...however, if a HS kid wants to try to make an NBA or NFL or MLB team - let 'em try. Why not? We'll let 16 year-olds be try to win multi-million dollar recording contracts on American Idol, but won't let a 19 year-old try to make it in professional sports? If the kid is good enough, let them play - if they aren't good enough, they won't make it...
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The main difference between football/basketball and baseball/hockey is the existence of a robust minor league system where newly drafted players are placed with other players at the same level they are.
Major League Baseball regularly drafts HS players, but who was the last HS player drafted that was sent immediately to the Major League club? Hockey works much the same with all of the Junior Legues and minor league teams. As far as the NBA, I think the long term plan is for the NBDL to serve as a minor league, but that is still years away from what I understand. The NBA draft has now shifted focus from demonstrated talent to potential. No team wants to be the one that passed on Joe HS player only to see the kid become a superstar in 3-5 years.
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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You said it yourself, when was the last time a HS draftee played MLB? Yet, we see regularly -- every year or two -- a HS kid who can play competitively at the NBA level. The difference, it seems to me, is not that there's a minor league system in MLB. Instead it just seems that it's easier for HS kids to perform at the necessary level in the NBA than in MLB.
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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I agree with the comments that the kids are often not in the proper position and don't have the proper perspective on life to make a decision on whether or not to enter the NBA draft. As was mentioned, many HS players who declare for the draft don't get drafted in the first round and aren't guaranteed any money, plus they lose out on the chance to play in college and get an education. Many of these kids are surrounded by bad influences and yes men and cannot properly evaluate their talent level, making decisions with inflated egos rather than sound judgements. Do I think an age limit should be put into place by the NBA? No, I think the NCAA should be more flexible in its rule prohibiting players who've signed with an agent from being eligible.
As for the comment in the article that college athletes are neither interested nor qualified to get a college education, that statement is pure ignorance. Athletic scholarships have opened the door for thousands of student-athletes, enabling them to get a quality education while bettering the school's sports programs and generating revenue. Many athletes take advantage of these opportunities that they might otherwise not have had and parlay them into successful careers. Most student-athletes that I know take their academics very seriously, although I agree that basketball and football players may be a bit more lax. That, however, is a commentary on the individual and not the system. |
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The route to the NHL for the majority of players is major junior hockey. In Canada (and remember, the majority of NHL'ers are still Canadian), once a player enters major junior, he forfeits his U.S. college eligibility. It is very much a one-way, all-or-nothing shot. The reason only 22 percent of NHL'ers graduate college is because only 22 percent (probably less, actually) of NHL players actually even go to college on their way to the NHL. Also, when Wayne Gretzky debuted in Pro Hockey (with the old WHA) he was actually 17, not 18.
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HOMER: Just gimme my gun. CLERK: Hold on, the law requires a five-day waiting period; we've got run a background check... HOMER: Five days???? But I'm mad NOW!! |
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I like this guy's argument and was with him all the way, until he threw race into it. If his editor had just clipped that paragraph, it would have been a great article. I also don't think it's David Stern's place to tell these kids what is better for them. (His they should stay in school line.) He is not their parent and doesn't get to make that decision. They should decide for themselves what is best for them. The only age limit I could agree with is 18, and that is for legal reasons. |
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Had to bring this one back, as a sports fan instead of an official.
![]() I, along with other members of my family, continued my education after high school because the facts of life are, as we are all told....the more education you have, THE MORE MONEY YOU WILL MAKE. ( One of the MAJOR advertisements for " Stay in School " is the amount of money the average HS graduate makes versus the drop out!) Now, the college days are hard to remember for some of us, but I dont recall any of my friends saying they are going to school so that they just know more. WE WERE ALL THERE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT DIFFERENT SUBJECTS FOR TWO REASONS: 1)Because we wanted to make more money, and 2)Because the school required you take these other classes not associated with your major so that your education isnt one dimensional. ( ie - so your able to make money in other areas if your major doesnt work out.) It all comes down to money, and this point is not negatioable. ( sp? ) When we say that these kids should go to college and not turn pro, why are we sayign it? Should they go to school to......?? Yes, education is important. But look at the situation and the world objectively. Do you believe that you would get more out of college now, than you did when you were 18? Yes ![]() And my last point is that it saddens me to see many people use the argument of failure or possible failure as a reason to make a law/by-law " for the kids (adults) best interest " because he " just doesnt know any better " and could possibly fail. All of those kids have a very legitimate possibility of acheiving something they have more than likely dreamed of for the previous 5-10 years....Sh** half of us on this forum have or have had the same dream. And along with this possibility of acheiving a dream comes a helluva lot of money. Money these kids can use to make more money. The ones who dont make it, STILL HAVE A LONG LIFE AHEAD OF THEM. You cant criticize these kids for making the decisions that they make. You can only think about what you would do, or what advice you would give them if they were your son. Respect the decisions that they make, and hope that the ones who have and do fail ( at pursuing a DREAM! ) either try again, or find another path in life. 1) Coulda, shoulda, woulda......versus 2)Tried.Failed.Tried again.Failed.Found something new and tried.Succeded ( or failed.Tried again)?????????????? I'll fight to take #2 and die lovin it. |
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