As a CBB fan, I don't like this one little bit...as a fan of human being's I think it's perfect.
per the article, there will be an education component to the "league". Also, $100,000 toward college if the player doesn't go pro. I think this environment will be much healthier to the kids who want to pursue professional bball vs the traditional routs now available.WTH! Skip HS? The money will legally go to the parents. It will create greedy parents selling their kids like Bowen & others were doing.
per the article, there will be an education component to the "league". Also, $100,000 toward college if the player doesn't go pro. I think this environment will be much healthier to the kids who want to pursue professional bball vs the traditional routs now available.
by "on notice", I meant that colleges will now need to compete for these kids and as the rules stand I don't see why kids would choose college when they have every intention to go pro. This league sounds like it would tailor the education to their needs (GED's, financial independence, nutrition), give them power over their image, pay them. If the NCAA doesn't change it's tune, the talent pool will be greatly diminished. I didn't see it as a legitimate threat until I read the article, saw who was invested in it and how it would succeed.College may not be the option these kids go, but OT league hasn't put it on notice. March Maddness is still a billion dollar event. College teams have a fanbase regionally, locally, and from alumni. There's already a brand. There's already thousands of students on campus to go to games and buy gear.
If the NCAA tournament ever stops making money and drawing eyeballs, I'll worry.
College to me isn't about the Zion's or guys like that. They sell regular season hype for big programs.by "on notice", I meant that colleges will now need to compete for these kids and as the rules stand I don't see why kids would choose college when they have every intention to go pro. This league sounds like it would tailor the education to their needs (GED's, financial independence, nutrition), give them power over their image, pay them. If the NCAA doesn't change it's tune, the talent pool will be greatly diminished. I didn't see it as a legitimate threat until I read the article, saw who was invested in it and how it would succeed.
The casual audience is where money is made.I can't imagine anyone caring about such a league. I can see avid basketball fans tuning in when there is absolutely nothing else on, but that's about it. I can see myself watching 1 game. Maybe. As others have said, perhaps this is a loss-leader for downstream savings when the busts are more filtered out. The problem is these players won't be amateurs anymore and a lot of them are going to get bad advice and lose their chance at a life-changing college degree with zero debt.
Good point I don’t know of anyone who watches the G league.Anybody in the thread following the G league in any way?
It's just a worse version of minor league baseball. Players move around so quickly that it's not the same team every year. But the difference is that it's not an outdoor event in good weather like baseball minor league games. Basketball is at it's best in front of large or engaged crowds.Does the G league crown a champion every year? Is there any meaningfulness to the games at all besides dudes trying to play up?
Seriously, I can't imagine anyone caring about this proposed new league.
But the difference is that it's not an outdoor event in good weather like baseball minor league games. Basketball is at it's best in front of large or engaged crowds.
G League is adult AAU. Lot of bad shots, followed by bad defense, followed by one on one, Hard to watch.
I'm ready for some Bats games this summer. And man, we've sure missed out on a lot of Cards baseball the last year, we've had teams that can win it all!This is spot on and I will add beer in the sun with a breeze is a great time.