Going pro

April 22, 2009

Jeremy Tyler goes pro before his junior prom

The Jeremy Tyler is reportedly going to Europe, bypassing not only college, but also his senior year of high school. Start the basketball world spinning off its axis. Now.

Dan Wetzel is on the beat yet again and scored a great interview with both Jeremy and his father. Writes Wetzel:

Tyler will play against the grown men who can challenge a player of his size and potential. Away from the court he’ll be home-schooled, earn a GED and return in two seasons when he’s eligible for the 2011 draft. By then, Jeremy Tyler figures, he’ll be a much better player and person; having learned from top coaches, enjoyed unlimited practice time and broadened his horizons in a foreign land. He calls it “a dream job” and isn’t the slightest bit nostalgic for homecoming, prom or missing out on college hoops.

Sonny Vaccaro is advising the family, so we can expect a backlash from those who want to protect the status quo.

James Tyler, Jeremy's father, on taking on the basketball establishment “It’s just the old way of doing things and no one wants to swallow the pill of change. Basketball is an American sport and they want the kids to go through the channels. And I think there is so much money generated in collegiate sports that they don’t want that interrupted. It’s a double standard.”

Is it a good move? Only time will tell, but according to an NBA GM: “His game will be picked apart [by scouts], but long-term it’s much better for his development as a player. It’s a bold move, but I’ve seen tape and that kid could play in the NBA right now. He’s an incredible talent.”


Just like Brandon Jennings, I am rooting Jeremy Tyler. This will not be an easy path, but neither is college.

Here's an expert from a recent Basketball Times column I wrote on Brandon:

Continue reading "Jeremy Tyler goes pro before his junior prom" »

August 22, 2008

Marc Isenberg Speaks to the Orlando Magic on the Business of Being a Professional Basketball Player

For the past three off-seasons, Jameer Nelson has organized an event that he calls the “Building Magic Week”, where he flies his Orlando Magic teammates into his hometown of Philadelphia for team/camaraderie building sessions. Jameer usually spends his own money to house his teammates in a hotel, pay for their meals, and provide basketball training and conditioning sessions. This year he added a little wrinkle to the “Building Magic” sessions, hiring our own Marc Isenberg to speak to the team about the business of being a Professional Basketball player.  You can read a full write up on this year’s “Building Magic Week” and Marc’s participation at the event on the Philadelphia Inquirer.

20080822_inq_magic22-b

20080822_inq_magic22z-c

-Nate Jones

August 18, 2008

Money Players Links

Money Players is all about being the best resource for the business of being a professional athlete. Here are some links from around the web that we think are must reads for any current or aspiring professional athlete and their families.

--Nate Jones

For more in-depth information on the business of being a professional athlete, purchase Money Players: A Guide to Success in Sports, Business & Life for Current and Future Pro Athletes, written by our own Marc Isenberg.

July 31, 2008

Education Must Teach That There is More to Life Than Hoop Dreams...Just Not Through The Way Len Elmore Suggests

By Nate Jones

Len Elmore is a man I respect for his accomplishments on and off the court. He’s a rarity in that following his playing career he pursued and completed a law degree at Harvard Law. However, I must respectfully disagree with his comments in his op-ed piece for this week’s Sports Business Journal.

In his article entitled “Education Must Teach That There is More to Life Than Hoop Dreams”, Elmore suggests that the NBA should raise its age limit requirement to at least three years out of high school so that “hoop dreams don’t eschew young black males chances to develop tools that will last a lifetime rather than a short lived basketball career.“ Elmore believes that it is time to “practice more responsible paternalism and remove the pro option after high school”. He says that he doesn’t worry about the top prospects and that he “only worries about the thousands or tens of thousands of pretenders who without the riches of NBA stardom or the promise of an education, are left with few viable options.” His solution to this dilemma is to force kids to play college basketball for at least three seasons.

Elmore’s argument has several flaws. Most notable is his belief that NCAA Division-1 revenue generating athletes (football and men’s basketball) actually have the same opportunity to learn in a college setting as the rest of the students on campus. The honest truth is that most of them are not prepared to succeed in college academically due to the circumstances they grow up in. 

It’s no secret that the top college football and basketball players often come from low-income, single-parent, inner-city situations. Students from those environments often don’t make it to college, not because of their misguided hoop dreams, but because of lack of opportunity and preparation. If they are accepted into college on an NCAA athletic scholarship (remember the key word here…athletic), they are expected to perform at the highest level on the court, and just get by off of it. This is basically for two reasons: 1) College Basketball is a big business, and inner-city blacks playing for top schools across the country are the main drivers of that business. With all the rah-rah about the NCAA, the schools, the administrators and the coaches wanting to see kids succeed academically, the bottom line is that the priority is on the court performance.  2) Even if the colleges wanted them to succeed academically, most of them wouldn’t be able to because the education system they were funneled through failed to prepare them to achieve academically at a top university. This has NOTHING to do with chasing a hoop dream and everything to do with socio-economic inequity.

The bottom line is that college football and college basketball are big business. While the NCAA and its members often tout the academic side of college athletics, there are far more economic incentives in place to keep the best players (who are often the most at-risk students) eligible than to provide proper mechanisms to receive a meaningful education.

But beyond the reality that most revenue generating athletes aren’t prepared for and/or aren’t given the opportunity to succeed on college campuses, Elmore’s suggestion that forcing kids to stay in school for three years will have a trickle down effect of getting more blacks to aim for the college diploma is just ridiculous. Again, low income, inner-city blacks aren’t failing to graduate from high school because they are chasing hoop dreams. They are failing to graduate from high school because many of them come from unstable, single-parent, low-income homes; grow up in rough inner-city neighborhoods; and attend run-down, under-financed schools, with overworked and/or uninspired teachers and administrators.

Mr. Elmore is correct to believe that education must teach that there is more to life than hoop dreams. However, having the NBA raise its age requirement is not the way to get there. If you’re worried about young blacks making the mistake of forgoing education at an early age in favor of focusing on an unlikely career of professional sports, entertainment, or whatever, I think your focus shouldn’t be on preventing surefire first round picks from becoming multi-millionaires (and uplifting their families beyond anything they could ever do for them with just a college degree), but on fundraising, lobbying houses of government, and reaching out to the inner-city to help open up more opportunities for low-income black males, so that the idea of achieving in the classroom and completing a college education seems more attainable than becoming great a professional athlete, a rapper, or in the worst case, a criminal.

Lastly, I must say that Mr. Elmore is wrong to state the Brandon Jennings “is neither a pioneer blazing a trail for other young men to follow nor a hero” and wrong to write him off as “simply another impressionable young man, susceptible to the hawkers and hangers-on who tell him what he wants to hear instead of what he needs to hear.” While no reasonable person is ready to anoint Jennings, he has every right to pursue his professional aspirations sooner rather than later. And Jennings may well become a pioneer. With his move, he's opening top prospects eyes to the opportunities to play basketball outside of just the NCAA, the D-League and maybe even the NBA. 

There are only 450 roster spots in the NBA, but there are also many more opportunities to play basketball for good money all across the world. But because of the market power of the NCAA and the NBA, many players have limited themselves to the traditional path of playing for the NCAA for no money (while coaches, administrators, broadcasters, sponsors, NCAA executives, etc. all benefit financially from the system) and then fighting for one of 450 spots in the NBA. 

But with basketball leagues continuing to grow all across the world, and guys like Jennings, and Josh Childress showing that it’s okay to utilize the entire world market, not just the traditional path of the NCAA and the NBA, you are going to see more and more opportunities open up for talented basketball players. While the NCAA is often slow to recognize and embrace change (mostly because they've never had serious competition), the (Basketball) World is Flat, as Thomas Friedman pointed out in his seminal book. Basketball is the fastest growing sport in the world -- and becoming more economically prosperous every day. In future years we will likely see more young men blaze the same trail as Jennings, especially if Jennings shows there is a viable path to professional basketball that does not include a pit stop in college and also provides an opportunity to earn money and get their families out of poor circumstances at an earlier date. The NCAA should either respond to this fast-changing world by letting go of its notion that U.S.-born players should be compelled to attend college for a set amount of years or by enhancing the experience it provides these gifted players. 

Nate Jones is an aspiring sports agent and a rising 2L at the UCLA School of Law. You can read more of his work at http://jonesonthenba.blogspot.com/

July 09, 2008

The Brandon Jennings Experiment

Those who follow college basketball are split on the implications of star basketball player Brandon Jennings' decision to go off overseas, rather than follow the traditional, established path to the NBA. I have a tough time criticizing someone who decides that college basketball and college are not for him. I think it is premature to judge Brandon, mostly because the public and the media does not know all the factors that went into his decision. Clearly, he is not academically motivated, which for 99.999% of the population is not a good thing, but in Brandon's situation this may turn out to be fine. Hopefully, he is motivated to learn about those things that most directly impact his responsibilities and opportunities as a professional basketball player. The college basketball community and media will be watching to see how the Brandon Jennings Experiment turns out. If he succeeds in Europe, basketball's most likely "one and done" prospects will have a viable option. If Brandon fails he might end up becoming a cautionary tale, although the population of one does is still not a sufficient sample to reach any meaningful conclusion.

Let's look at a sampling of opinions:

ESPN's Doug Gottlieb (subscription required) thinks Brandon is getting in over his head, writing "Jennings is not ready for the culture shock of playing overseas, for the challenge of playing grown men as opposed to over-matched high schoolers, for the huge drop in the NBA draft stock. Yet that might not be enough to deter him from skipping school. And in the long run, he might end up a lower-rated NBA prospect but a better player and more well-rounded, grounded person."
Jason Whitlock "Why risk being the next O.J. Mayo, the USC one-and-done-er done in by sloppy ESPN reporting, a former, opportunistic friend/ex-drug-dealer and antiquated NCAA rules?" Comment: The problem going forward is every top basketball must be prepared to the get the full O.J. Mayo Treatment. If they have any skeletons in their closet or even just some questionable associations, the media and rival fan sites will bury the kid.

Sports agent David Bauman (and an Emory classmate of mine) on how the college basketball might change if Brandon succeeds: "College would be a bunch of nobodies. TV interest would drop and the overall product would suffer."

Comment: College basketball will be fine, even if the top 5 to 7 players bypass college. In fact, I think it might be even better. The focus can turn to those who want to be in college and have the ability, the interest and the motivation to do the academic work.

Several interesting comments from a Washington Post article on the topic:

Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim
"[Jennings is] only doing it because he's desperate. He wants to be a one-and-done player. So he doesn't sit out [a year] some place, he wants to go play. I'm not even sure he'll be that wanted in Europe. He's a thin, little guard, and European basketball is pretty good these days. It's not like he's going to go over there and be a star."

Comment: Sour grapes. Was Syracuse's most famous one-and-done any more academically prepared and motivated than Brandon? From my perspective it is inappropriate for a college coach to comment on a player's academic background, especially since he has no direct connection to him. Also, while I respect Boeheim's coaching ability and also his international experience, since when did he become an expert on European professional basketball?

NCAA president Myles Brand
"Before the rule took effect and we had some young men jump from high school to the pros, we had a successful game and March Madness pulled in millions of dollars. After the rule, we've had some success and March Madness has pulled in millions of dollars. Either way for us is fine. It's up to the young man."

Comment: Agreed! For those who accuse the NCAA of being a monopoly, the argument weakens if players have viable options.

--Marc Isenberg

UPDATE: Sporting News college basketball writer Mike DeCourcy emailed: "Any idea if this David Bauman fellow was living in Singapore or something from 1995-2005, a period during which college basketball missed out on Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James -- and still landed a $6 billion TV contract for its postseason tournament alone?"

Comment: College basketball is a marketing juggernaut. The D-League unquestionably has more talented basketball players, but how many people follow the league? The college basketball consumer is not savvy enough to figure this out, nor do they even care. DeCourcy also writes one of the more well-reasoned articles on the topic. David may not understand the popularity of college basketball, but he certainly understands NBA free agency.

June 15, 2008

More O.J., agents, runners and baseball draft

Jason Whitlock, the love-him-or-hate sportswriter, offers some interesting points about how the media and the public view college basketball and baseball players.and their interactions with agents. Writes Whitlock:

When the NCAA enacted its new, get-tough Academic Progress Report standards, a little-known fact that the media ignored is that college baseball programs traditionally performed far below basketball programs. Let me translate that for you: Baseball players were less likely to graduate from college than basketball players. The APR forced baseball coaches to bring their kids back to campus for summer school rather than allowing them to audition in front of scouts and agents in the Cape Cod League. Yeah, the "cesspool" of street agents, runners, handlers, scouts and agents we love to rail against in basketball co-mingle in baseball at high school All-American games without raising a word of dissent.

Conquest Chronicles, a USC fan blog, weaves some of my earlier comments on agents and the baseball draft to make his case that college athletics could be improved if we "Make it above board!". Writes Conquest Chronicles:

I am not naive enough to think that this sort of thinking work have stopped the alleged benefits that an O.J. Mayo might have received but instead of being a watch dog why not consider some sort of partnership with the pro leagues and agents with stiff penalties for those that break the rules.

The product would be so much better if the "minimum" requirements helped nurture the players into more responsible solid citizens that can also play at that level. I also agree that rookies should play one year in the "D" league before getting to the big dance. Surely some legitimate compromise can be made..

Money Players reader and frequent commenter Garrett Sanders emails some interesting points:

Guillory allegedly was given $250k to recruit OJ by BDA, but "only"30k ended up in his pocket. Clearly, if OJ took money from Guillory, he was wrong for this...but the larger point is that there is economic system that compensates people who have deep relationships with top players. For college coaches, the market determines what college coaches can are paid. For runners, agents can have them on the payroll (even if the practice is generally frowned upon). And then for the players, the ones who create economic value for both sports agents and athletic departments, are conveniently cut out of the deal. I am not sure I want college athletes to be paid, the  schools and the NCAA are the ones who have turned this into a big money game. So if they take the one and done players, they're telling the public it's about the money, not the education. And if they don't pay them, someone else will step in. Everyone can do their typical hand wringing, but should anyone expect a different outcome.

June 02, 2008

High school phenom goes straight to the NFL

The NFL requires players to be three years removed from high school before they are eligible to play in the League. NFL owners recognize that 18- to 21-year-old cheerleaders are in their athletic prime, and therefore, have no such prohibition. Deadspin has the least creepy coverage of the story of the high school cheerleader making the New England Patriot cheerleading squad.

Judging from the comments on Deadspin and WithLeather (a few funny, tasteful ones listed below), how is this nubile, young sex object any more prepared to handle the potential dangers that lurk in the NFL (on the Internet and other very real places) than a hulking football player that is, say, two years removed from high school? A NFL owners understand that young sex objects and older, more mature football players are both good for business.

A couple funny (and not all that offensive) comments from Deadspin:

I for one am appalled at high school kids jumping immediately to the professional ranks. They're not fully developed, and really need a year or two in an NCAA program to prepare them for such a life.
/NCAA spokesman

I'm appalled!
/Allison Stokke's dad

How's her mom?
/Belichik

May 29, 2008

Building a better mouse-release

In an article on the "one and done" phenomena in the The Athens Banner-Herald, Tennessee basketball coach Bruce Pearl is quoted:

"It's not working. Both the NBA and the NCAA coaches, we all want a good system that gives the players an opportunity and the colleges some sanity and let the NBA be able to have the best players that can play. We know that what we have now isn't working for us and we don't think it's working for the players."

Amen, my fellow lonsman. The current system that doesn't work. This issue is not that complicated, folks. Players who want to go to college and play basketball should. And players who don't should have viable options. This whole issue has been often framed in absolute terms by the stakeholders: Players believe they should have the right to earn a living whenever the market signals they are ready. The NBA wants mature, pre-marketed players entering the Association. The NCAA wants real student athletes. Boosters just want to win. And athletic departments have to find the proper balance: Keep well-heeled boosters happy without completely abandoning their academic mission.

It's like Baseketball, but better
The amateur baseball draft is the best system. Players are eligible to be drafted after their senior year of high school. They don't declare for the draft. They are simply drafted. Then if a Major League team offers them enough money, they sign. Otherwise, if they are not offered a sufficient contract they can go to an NCAA school...BUT THE PLAYERS MUST AGREE TO A 3-YEAR ENLISTMENT. Perhaps the NBA should consider this approach.

The marketplace decides who's ready. What a concept! And players don't have to rely on an agent or runner promises and hype. Everybody wins. Why not hold a supplemental NBA draft for high school players? NBA teams select players they think are worth signing. Drafted players either sign according to a rookie scale or they go to college. If a player signs, he goes to the NBDL for at least one season. If he opts to go to an NCAA school, he is not eligible for the NBA draft for three years. And to boot we can rid  "declaring for the draft," "testing the waters" and "agent/outside influence" from our sports vernacular.

Feasting on agents and runners
And finally...along with James Tanner, David Thorpe, and Jason Levien, I participated in TrueHoop's "Runners and Recruiting: A Roundtable." There's so much to chew on, it took two sittings. Second helping is expected on Thursday.

--Marc Isenberg

May 08, 2008

Josh Pastner has left the McKale Center

It was just announced that my friend Josh Pastner accepted a position to become an assistant coach at Memphis. Good hire for Memphis and great move by Josh. I hate to see Josh leave the Pac-10, but he's been at Arizona for 12, 13 years, first as a student-athlete and then as an assistant coach. I also think it will be good for him to learn under another great coach like Calipari, whom I become of a big fan of.

Not only can Cal coach, but he consistently puts his players' best interest above all else. (My standard disclaimer: I love when guys stay in school 2, 3 even 4 years, but it is unfair to criticize elite players and also unmotivated students when they go pro.)

Here's what Cal told Derrick Rose prior to making himself eligible for the NBA draft:
"If you want to do what's right for you and your family, you should consider leaving. If you want to do what's right for me and my family, you probably should stay."

And I put this in my Money Players book....
Memphis basketball coach John Calipari famously tore up Dejuan Wagner's scholarship immediately after his freshman year to "make sure he understood he wasn't coming back." Wagner was the sixth pick in the 2002 NBA Draft, but lasted only three years due to medical problems. Said Calipari: "Now you might say [Wagner's] out of the league, but he made $15 million."

April 27, 2008

Blame agents and everyone else

Like most top college basketball freshman, Arizona's Jerryd Bayless has made himself eligible for the 2008 NBA Draft. He has also signed with a sports agent, which means he can't "test the waters" and return to college if he is dissatisfied with where he might go in the draft. Mock drafts currently have Bayless being selected anywhere from the 3rd to 5th pick.

Arizona basketball coach Lute Olson is apparently displeased that Bayless decided to leave, and is also upset that he was not consulted. Olson reportedly told ESPN's Andy Katz (ESPN Insider subscription required): "I don't think it was very intelligent on Jerryd's part, but his parents felt he should do it [and sign with an agent]."

Not intelligent? Wow. To me, it would be hard for anyone to find fault with Jerryd's decision. When these decisions are being contemplated I typically invoke legendary UNC coach Dean Smith, who generally advised players projected to be top 10 picks to come out early primarily because they could secure their financial future.

Olson is especially angry with basketball agent Jeff Schwartz, whom Bayless signed with. Said Olson,  "The agent never was in contact with us and never called anyone in the Arizona office to indicate that they would be signing Jerryd. We'll make sure that agent doesn't represent any of our players in the future as long as I'm here."

Perhaps Olson used his leave of absence to brush up on the Arizona's Uniform Athlete Agent Act (UAAA).

The University of Arizona athletic department's student-athlete handbook makes the law chillingly clear:

"You become immediately ineligible if you agree (orally or in writing) to have a person represent you in future negotiations involving your athletics abilities or worth. Be aware that Arizona State Law requires notification of your institution's athletic director within 72 hours if such an agreement is made with an agent. Civil or criminal action could result from non-compliance. You become ineligible at once if you or your family or friends accept anything (inducements) from an agent or their emissaries."

Olson may have wanted to be involved in the decision process, but Jerryd and his advisers didn't do so. That's their right. If Olson wanted to talk to Jerryd, then he should have reached out earlier. Complaining to Katz about what he thinks transpired is petty. And let's not forget that Olson, who recruited Bayless to play for him, presumably didn't consult with Bayless about his decision to not coach the team this past year.

--Marc Isenberg

Money Players: The book