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Mark Bradley: College basketball stinks

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by Alma, Jan 28, 2013.

  1. Versatile

    Versatile Active Member

    They would have to stop shaking in anger at the mention of the word "agent," then.
     
  2. BTExpress

    BTExpress Well-Known Member

    And the team that used one of its two draft selections on this player gets . . . ?
     
  3. Twoback

    Twoback Active Member

    This would have made a heck of a column.
     
  4. Twoback

    Twoback Active Member


    The difference between then and now is the rookie salary cap. The incentive to be selected at the very top of the draft was so much greater, and the investment in those picks was so much more substantial, that players waited until they were "ready" and teams wanted to be as certain as possible their investments would pay.
    When the gamble on the 4/5 pick went from $30 million to $8 million, it wasn't that great a risk to take a wildly talented HS kid and see if he'd develop. The rookie cap changed everything -- and not for the better. If the NFL didn't have the 3-year rule, it was damage their talent pool the same way it did basketball's.
     
  5. BTExpress

    BTExpress Well-Known Member

    Good point. Although 1986 begs to differ. And begs for a new drug.
     
  6. Mark2010

    Mark2010 Active Member

    Look at the top five picks in the 1984 NBA draft: Akeem Olajuwon, Sam Bowie, Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley, Sam Perkins.

    Put those five guys on the floor together in their prime and they smoke a team comprised of the top five picks from any other year... ever. If you need a point guard, there was some guy named John Stockton who was picked No. 16 (behind Lancaster Gordon and Leon Wood, among others) who could distribute the ball pretty well.
     
  7. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    Who gives a shit? That's their problem.
     
  8. dirtybird

    dirtybird Well-Known Member

    It's great to watch old games becuase back in the day, players had a lot more leeway on taking bad shots. Throw on those games and watch the backup power forwards and center fire off no-touch, awful-form 15-footers. They make a few, and coaches let them go with it.
     
  9. Mark2010

    Mark2010 Active Member

    I could support that. It would make teams think twice before spending a pick on an early-entry candidate.
     
  10. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    I don't think anybody except the real Lost Causers yearning for the days of 4-year-lettermen really begrudge lottery picks the right to go pro. If a guy is going to be a lottery pick and see significant PT as a rookie, of course, go.

    It's the guys who are going to be lower first-round picks, or second-rounders without guaranteed deals, who would be better off coming back. And college basketball would be better off LETTING them come back.
     
  11. Versatile

    Versatile Active Member

    I'd take LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, Chris Bosh and Darko Milicic because the lineup would function better than having Sam Perkins at shooting guard. But yes, the 1984 draft is heralded. What's your point? There's about one great, stand-out draft every decade.
     
  12. Small Town Guy

    Small Town Guy Well-Known Member

    God damn it I typed this exact thing before you but took time to go back through the thread and you beat me. I even had Sam at the 2 guard. Does Hakeem dominate? Of course, although Bowie's corpse, Barkley and Perkins might be clogging things for him. But the perimeter is no contest.
     
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