Well, it was nice to dream that he might stay for another year. Good luck and farewell.
grrrah76;842679706 said:
darn
grrrah76;842679881 said:
I don't blame the kid(s) at all, but I do blame the system. College basketball AND the NBA would be better off with giving kids at least two years of college and development.
parentswerebears;842679807 said:
+20000000
beelzebear;842679898 said:
The NBA and NFL really should get their own minor leagues. OTOH, college revenue sports are making BILLIONS collectively and these kids are still amateurs. The system is totally f*cked up.
beelzebear;842679898 said:
The NBA and NFL really should get their own minor leagues. OTOH, college revenue sports are making BILLIONS collectively and these kids are still amateurs. The system is totally f*cked up.
OdontoBear66;842680097 said:
Spot on.
59bear;842680270 said:
College baseball never enjoyed a fan base anything like that of football or basketball.
tsubamoto2001;842680108 said:
If so, college hoops and college football may go the way of college baseball, which like 5 people care about. It's never been about "fairness" for the "amateur" athlete. It's about money and will always be.
Minor League baseball has 5 levels and decades of history. The logistics of minor leagues in basketball and football are complex and difficult to execute. It's like trying to build a good subway system in Los Angeles--very expensive and decades too late.
College Football is a huge moneymaker in part because they keep the best players for up to 3 years after their HS graduation. The NFL benefits greatly from the current structure and there is unlikely to be a change in it.
Keeping players in school longer would benefit both college hoops and the NBA. Both products would be higher quality (good veterans wouldn't be pushed out by younger players unlikely to contribute early) and the NBA wouldn't have to worry about the costs to expand their "minor league" even further. Adam Silver has been pointing to raising the age limit by a year and it'll be interesting to see how much of a factor it plays in the next CBA negotiation between the League and the Players Union.
NewYorkCityBear;842679805 said:
Even though it was only one year, I'm glad JB was a Golden Bear.
beelzebear;842680279 said:
College hoops also has a longer tradition than the NBA, which didn't really take off until 70s/80s, specifically with Magic and Bird, then Jordan. It also has March Madness which is unique with real spectacle with amazing competition. This year's championship game showed it.
Bisonbob;842680378 said:
It is hard to say it was not good for Cal the have JB for one year, but there is a down size. Almost all one and dones, with the exception of Kentucky who can reload each year, keeps other programs from building a consistent program. JB is a classic example. His arrival prompted the Coaching staff to build the team around a raw freshmen who had great physical ability, but almost no refinement at playing at a D1 level. He was able in HS to just out physical everyone, and he soon found he could not do that consistently at the College level. If he, and hopefully Rabb, spent at least one more year, they would hopefully learn the game, and develop both physically, but more importantly mentally. It was clear JB was not ready for the mental adjustment. I'm afraid JB will languish for some time trying to grow his body, and basketball acumen. So CAl missed out on a 3-4 year good player in the program, and now with major recruiting over they will scramble to fill a scholarship spot, and sort of start over again. If Rabb goes you just set the program back several years. I love college basketball, but it has gotten so bad to watch, due in part to the early outs. A two year commitment would help, and a properly funded and supported D league sponsored collectively by the NCAA and NBA, could improve both venues.
59bear;842680270 said:
College baseball never enjoyed a fan base anything like that of football or basketball.
GBMARIN;842680540 said:
Careful what you wish for. One mock has Jaylen to the Kings.....ouch.