After watching another great performance by Utah Jazz power forward Al Jefferson last night, I was reminded of a ridiculous rule established by the National Basketball Association after the 2006 draft — the NBA age limit.
The rule says that a player must wait at least one year after his high school graduating class to enter into the NBA draft.
I can’t think of a more pointless rule.
Kobe Bryant, Lebron James and Kevin Garnett have arguably been some of the most dominating players of the league since they were drafted and combined they have multiple NBA championships and Most Valuable Player awards.
But besides being great players, what do Jefferson, Bryant, James and Garnett have in common?
They were each drafted out of high school.
And these are only four of the many current players that have come straight out of high school.
There have been 42 high school draftees in all, including dominate players like Tracy McGrady, Amar’e Stoudemire, Jermaine O’meal and Dwight Howard.
So why is it necessary for a player whose profession will be basketball to wait a year before they can work?
Let’s think hypothetically for a moment. If after graduation you were offered a multi-million dollar job with a company, would you take it or would you defer the job in order to go to college?
I know I would take the job.
So why should basketball players face special restrictions?
When somebody asks you who the best player in the NBA is right now, who would you choose? Most knowledgable sports fans would choose either Bryant or James.
High school draftees have produced some of the best talent of the NBA, so why change what has worked so well in the past?
Not only does the rule delay a player from working, it hurts the school that they are attending.
The player is a waste of the college’s time and money.
“Now you can have a kid come to school for a year and play basketball and he doesn’t even have to go to class,” said legendary coach Bobby Knight in 2007. “He would not have to attend a single class the second semester to play through the whole second semester of basketball.”
This is a waste of scholarship money that could be going to others who are in school for the right reasons.
“I wouldn’t want to babysit a kid who is taking 12 credits of pottery and dance classes,” Robert Bartlett said, a former professor at Stanford University. “I’d rather that money go to a serious student who would be graduating.”