Can't believe I just saw another great game in the BOS-CHI series. It's only fitting this is going to a Game 7.
Can't believe I just saw another great game in the BOS-CHI series. It's only fitting this is going to a Game 7.
I'm reading this Yahoo article about a kid named Jeremy Tyler who is going to forgo his senior year of high school to play overseas in Europe. His goal is to get 2 years of experience and then return to the US for the 2011 NBA Draft. He'll be home-schooled and earn his GED (overseas, I assume).
My reaction, good for him. I think there's a terrible double standard for young highly talented basketball players. On one hand, they've been poked and prodded and coddled since they were in junior high school (some earlier) and then asked to follow the same path as every other 17-18 year old kid. Go to college, earn a degree, etc. Why should they? Their vocation is not going to be in the fields of engineering or sociology or biology, etc. They have chosen a profession for themselves - PROFESSIONAL ATHLETE. Why shouldn't they do whatever they can to enhance their skill sets in that area? Jeremy Tyler was basically a man playing against children. Do you think another year of crushing high school kids was going to improve his draft stock? Regarding college, do you think playing against college level kids is better for honing your basketball skills than playing against professional men in Europe? The only noise I hear are from pro-NCAA folks who somehow feel like the value of education can't be compromised. My argument would be, if they didn't play basketball for your school, would you let them in? If they care about education so much, what would it matter if Jeremy Tyler played professional basketball for 15 years and then enrolled in college at the age of 33 (which he stated he plans to do). That's the difference between a professional athlete and a person with a normal career. Athletes don't need a college education to do their jobs, but normal people need a college education before anyone will hire them.
And don't get me started about how much the NCAA makes off essentially free labor...
To put the following quote in context, Bill Simmons of ESPN is writing about the Cavaliers-Clippers game yesterday. This is a hillarious quote about the final shot of the game by Zach Randolph.
The fans are in disbelief. Randolph's teammates are in disbelief. Dunleavy is making a face that my friend Sal later describes as a face I have never seen a human being make before. What ensued in the next 20 seconds could best be described like this: Imagine being trapped in one of those big hospital elevators with eight other people. One of them pulls his pants down and just starts going to the bathroom -- not No. 1 but No. 2. At that specific moment, the doors open for the next floor. How fast would everyone else in the elevator flee for the door? Lightning-fast, right? Like, Usain Bolt-level fast, right? That was the entire stadium after Z-Bo's air ball. He basically took a dump on the 3-point line.
The entire article is a nice microcosm of what I think is probably one of the worst run franchises in the NBA (Golden State used to hold that title). A great read for all basketball enthusiasts.
Amid all the steroid scandals, I came across this story of uncommon sportsmanship. What a story and a lesson to teach young athletes about the true importance of sports - caring about teammates, respecting your opponents, and building character that will extend beyond the court. Nowadays, talented kids are being plucked out of junior high and groomed to be superstars in college and beyond without ever getting to experience the simple joy of playing a friendly high school game. I'd much rather root for kids like Darius McNeal and Johntel Franklin than spoiled millionaires who cheat or behave badly.