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BigPPup
AGM Linebacker and I will bring the pain.


I'm a sports fanatic. I hail from Nelson County Virginia, and thats where I learned to be a Virginia Cavalier fan. I also learned to be a Dallas Cowboys fan because I hated how good the Redskins were doing. I've played sports at almost every level with the exception of being a fulltime professional, as a result I have a great perception on the sporting world. I love to talk sports and I've never been shy to share my opinion with someone.

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Jeremy Tyler to Skip High School and Go Pro-Europe

by BigPPup
created April 23, 2009, last edited August 13, 2009
10
Vote

In an interesting bit of news coming out of the New York Times, high school junior Jeremy Tyler the 6'11 basketball stud is electing to forgo his senior year of high school to move overseas to Europe and take up a professional career. Tyler's move would make him the first United States born high school player ever to leave school early for the pros.

"Nowadays people look to college for more off-the-court stuff versus being in the gym and getting better," Tyler told the newspaper. "If you're really focused on getting better, you go play pro somewhere. Pro guys will get you way better than playing against college guys."

Tyler is currently 17 years old and he has verbal commitment to play for Rick Pitino and Louisville. One can expect the Cardinals wanted Tyler to be a major part of their program in the near future.

Jeremy Tyler, considered one of the top big men in the Class of 2010, will follow in the path of Brandon Jennings, who opted to play in Italy this past season. After passing on his commitment to Arizona. It has yet to be seen if Jennings move will pan out with success in the NBA.

The real kicker to all of this is Tyler has yet to finish his junior year of high school at this point, and from all intents and purposes he has simply dropped out of high school right now.

"You know what? It's just a job," Jeremy's father, James, was quoted by The New York Times. "He gets a chance to work the job of his dreams and have fun doing it. There's kids leaving to go to Iraq at age 18. They took a job to serve their country. He's going to play ball."

Jeremy's father has since denied making such a statement, saying someone else must have made that comment.

"It was boring and I wasn't getting better," Tyler told The Times. "Each game was the same thing. I was getting triple-teamed and getting hacked. After each game I'd have scratches and bruises up and down my arms from getting triple-teamed. It just wasn't for me."

Granted I think this entire situation is frankly disastrous because I always support a kid getting an education, especially a high school education. But his last statement of being tired of being triple-teamed also concerns me from a competitive standpoint. If you are a great player you expect to get double and triple-teamed and you should thrive under that pressure. No one heard Jordan or LeBron or Kobe complain about the triple-teams. They see them as challenges and do whatever they can to step up and beat them.

Jeremy Tyler is an over sized boy who is now going into the jungle that is international professional basketball. The chances of him coming out on the other side unscathed are slim and few. And that is a shame because the kid is good and he can play. But he is setting himself up for failure.

The NBA needs to institute a two year minimum rule to get kids into college with no exception. No work around's no trips to Europe. If David Stern cares about the players and the game like he claims, he would make that a priority on his to-do list.


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
202 days ago
Score 3+-
It's about time. The day Doogie Howser came on the air, you HAD to know this was inevitable. Good for the guy! Screw the system and GET YOURS! It's the American way, dammit! Baseball and hockey players have done it since those games began. If the guy is good enough, then like the Houston Astros' great Bob Watson said in Bad News Bears... "LET THEM PLAY!!! LET THEM PLAY!!!"
Permalink | Reply
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
201 days ago
Score 1+-
I think it was William Devane who started the chant. But I also believe that Watson and Enos Cabell joined in. How cool is it that Rorschah played for the Bears?
Permalink
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
201 days ago
Score 1+-
Thank you! Enos Cabell! I could not remember his freeking name - and I'm far too lazy to look such a trivial thing up when I know it's gonna hit me eventually. Stupid Jose Cruz kept getting stuck in the way inside my head. Thanks.
Permalink
HeywoodJablomeWaterboy
202 days ago
Score 1+-
This kid is gonna feel like a dumass when he blows out his knee
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Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
202 days ago
Score 1+-
Wouldn't it be smarter than if he blows out his knee in HIGH SCHOOL? Pro means "he's getting paid" and because "he's getting paid", that means the people paying him will "have him insured"... This kid is securing his future, not risking it.
Permalink
Anonymous Fanatic #1
202 days ago
Score 0+-
Jennings proved these HS kids are way overmatched against pro comp at that age. Instead of 1 year dominating teenagers in HS, a Beasleyesque freshman year in college where you get to have a great time & don't even have to worry about grades, and be a lottery pick in the 2011 draft, you go to Europe against grown men and get exposed as a boy among men for 2 years, then see your draft stock fall off a cliff. What's the better choice?
Permalink | Reply
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
202 days ago
Score 1+-
If he's good enough to make it in the NBA, a trip to Europe won't derail that. In fact, as evidenced by all the other NBAers that played European Pro Basketball, it might HELP him! Playing against stronger competition - "getting exposed" and learning from it, adapting to it - is what makes you better, not worse. The lessons he'll learn just from living in Europe, traveling with a pro team and dealing with his finances actually IMPROVES his stock compared to some punk kid who outplayed a weak conference, got high and skipped classes to chases skirts, if you ask me.
Permalink
Taytay 24All-American
202 days ago
Score 2+-
But what if he's not good enough for the NBA? What's he left with then?
I'm all for the experience that being overseas will provide, but the kid should at least finish high school.
Permalink
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
202 days ago
Score 2+-
He can get a GED before he leaves for Europe. If his contract is enticing enough and he's smart, he'll get a clause put in that pays for his education in case of injury or either way regardless. You can always go back to school. You can't get a basketball career back. This argument has been made forever. Pro players who left school early finish their degrees ALL THE TIME.
Permalink
Taytay 24All-American
202 days ago
Score 3+-
Regarding a player who leaves college early, I would agree. But the kid needs to finish high school--he's a bit young to be arguing that "you can't always get a basketball career back".
Permalink
TrizzAll-American
202 days ago
Score 3+-
Can't knock the guy, people go to school for years and have no idea what they want to do, Tyler wants to play in the NBA...what this is again a backfiring of the one year rule, which says they have to be a year removed from high school, says nothing about finishing. Had he been able to declare out of high school, he would have a greater incentive to stay rather than prolonging the inevitable, sure theres risk of injury but once he signs a contract he can be injured and still get paid and go to school
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DeutscherRed-Shirting
202 days ago
Score 3+-
Meh Hockey players do this all the time, Whether he makes it or not its his life. What I don't understand is why the NBA has to make stopping this a priority.
Permalink | Reply
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
202 days ago
Score 1+-
Do the names Darko Milicic, Nikolaz Tskitishviueytuiegili or Kwame Brown ring a bell? The NBA is trying to protect it's billionaire owners from their own stupidity.
Permalink
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
201 days ago
Score 3+-
I agree. The NBA doesn't bother with high school dropouts who are not good at basketball, so why bother with this? Let the kid sink or swim on his own merits. It seems to me that he understands and accepts the inherent risks associated with this move.
Permalink
Anonymous Fanatic #2
90 days ago
Score 0+-
edd
Permalink | Reply
Anonymous Fanatic #2
90 days ago
Score 0+-
I think he should go for it. I mean he wants to play basketball as his career. What a better way to get tough and trained for the NBA than playing Pro now and gaining confidence and experience. He is making money, is a sacrifice he is willing to take. He is not dropping out of high school in vain. He is getting money in exchange to play basketball, something he loves.
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User BigPPup | April 23, 2009 | April 2009 | NBA Opinions | Basketball Opinions

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