- High school basketball student-athletes can make more frequent campus visits paid for by colleges (referred to as official visits). The visits can begin as soon as the summer before their junior year.
Not a big change. Visits rarely are the deciding factor
- Elite high school basketball recruits and college players can be represented by an agent who can help them make informed decisions about going pro.
In college, its the agents that pay the players, what money will the players have to pay the agents?
- Agents must be certified by an NCAA program with standards for behavior and consequences for violations.
I love this one, NCAA making money off the agents that are paid by the players, so the players essentially will be paying the NCAA
- Student-athletes will be able to participate in the NBA draft and return to school if undrafted, pending future action from the NBA and the National Basketball Players Association. Currently, college athletes who are interested in going pro can declare for the draft and attend the NBA combine, but must withdraw no more than 10 days after the combine to stay eligible.
Sucks for Kentucky, any kid one wants to get drafted no matter what will enter every year
- Division I schools will be required to pay for tuition, fees and books for men’s and women’s basketball players who left school and returned later to the same school to earn their degree. The NCAA is establishing a fund for schools who are otherwise unable to provide this aid.
This one is cute too, NCAA will collect more money for the players...haha
Disagree with your assessment that the ability to enter the draft and return will hurt UK. Think we’ll actually benefit from this.
We pretty much have everyone declare now as it is, so don’t think the declarations will increase. Plus, if this were the rule today, Gabriel is probably still playing this season. We probably get another season of Aaron Harrison.
This will hurt schools who have coaches that routinely talk kids out of entering the draft much more. There’s essentially no risk tied to entering, plus they can speak openly with an agent and not have to rely on any line of crap that their coach is feeding them. Think this is much more of a problem for the Roy Williams’ of the world than for us.
The other potential benefit is if it encourages players from schools like UNC to enter the draft more frequently, then that may push some of our fringe freshman down the draft board and cause them to play an additional year or two.
I think there’s real potential that we benefit from these changes quite a bit. Could be wrong, but I’m optimistic about it.