I've heard this argument repeatedly and everyone seems to be missing the point. The goal is not to improve his jump shot just for the sake of him being a better shooter. Yes, he can improve his shot at college as well as in the pros.
But, the reason to stay in college to improve his shot would be to improve his shot SO HE'S DRAFTED HIGHER. If his stock is as high as it is likely to be, then he should definitely go pro.
And thats why the talent in the NBA is concentrated on about 5 teams and the rest of the league is just cashing checks or at least some of them are.NBA is all about potential people.
That do not give a rat's *** if he has to develop a jumper. They will work on that.
will his announcement be on tv or just a presser
Without injury he would have been drafted at least 10 spots higher next year which isn't always a huge deal.Cant get much higher than it is.
Develop it in the NBA. Really smart choice by RW. This makes Fred look REALLY good. Taking players and putting them in the NBA.
It would be pretty difficult to look at his situation and say, no I think I am going to stay in college one more year, so I could get a little higher in the first round.
Also factor in how some guys would rather be drafted towards the end of the first round because you are usually going into a more stable organization than if you're drafted in the 10-20 range.By staying in college to improve his draft slot, he's also costing himself a year of income and also delaying his real payday, his second contract by a year. If he's going to be a first round pick this year, it doesn't make financial sense to wait until next year just to move up ten spots.
Ya I agree he is borderline great at passing in college, but some passes are wild. So he is just going to play PG in the league? I dont think he is that great of a defender either.
I've heard this argument repeatedly and everyone seems to be missing the point. The goal is not to improve his jump shot just for the sake of him being a better shooter. Yes, he can improve his shot at college as well as in the pros.
But, the reason to stay in college to improve his shot would be to improve his shot SO HE'S DRAFTED HIGHER. If his stock is as high as it is likely to be, then he should definitely go pro.
By staying in college to improve his draft slot, he's also costing himself a year of income and also delaying his real payday, his second contract by a year. If he's going to be a first round pick this year, it doesn't make financial sense to wait until next year just to move up ten spots.
The teams with talent do, see Miami and Chicago.They play defense inthe NBA?
Also factor in how some guys would rather be drafted towards the end of the first round because you are usually going into a more stable organization than if you're drafted in the 10-20 range.
Without injury he would have been drafted at least 10 spots higher next year which isn't always a huge deal.
I agree with the how good this makes Hoiberg look.
IF he gets drafted in the first round, he might be prolonging a pay day but in the long run if he improved his draft stock, he'll be making more money in the long run.
Think about this situation:
Leave early: $1 million
Stay an extra year: $4 million
In "leave early"..in two years he might make $2 million, but if he stayed an extra year he might make double the amount in one year as he would in two.
Lot of "it depends" crap going on here.
Just to give people an idea of salary based on last year.
2011-12 NBA Rookie Salary Scale | HOOPSWORLD | Basketball News & NBA Rumors
The 2011-12 and 2012-13 NBA rookie salary scales begin at the same amount as the 2010-11 scale, but the increases from Year 1 to Year 2 and Year 2 to Year 3 are lower.