Knicks1969 wrote:H1AND1 wrote:Knicks1969 wrote:I don't know what his handlers are doing, but they are trying their darnest to hide this kid as much as possible. He is an unknown commodity and should be participating in all of the combines to showcase his talent. I can understand Okafor and Towns not participating, but not Mudiay.
Mudiay's is a mystery and as it stands right now, his draft stock projects him as a top 5 pick. Why on earth would he submit to an intensive process designed to bring out flaws and risk lowering his stock?
You have it backwards, Im afraid. His handlers are trying to preserve his stock as much as possible. This is the way it works. The projected top picks who have some questions do not go all out going to every combine and workout. See Exum last year.
You are correct and I pray to God this dude is NOT drafted as a lotto pick. That would be a slap in the face to all the young kids who took the college route.
He's a lock to go top 4.
I'm very curious about him, but I understand why others are wary. But he earned like 1.5M for him and his family by forgoing the cheap and fake one year of college ball.
Kyrie Irving missed all but ten games of his one year of college and people were wary about him, too. He turned out okay. Obviously it can go the other way, but I don't think it should be held against the kid that he wanted money for a year rather than go through the dog and pony show of pretending to attend classes and study the sacred art of college hoops. March Madness makes a billion dollars every year and the kids get none of it. They get a scholarship, but most of them never take advantage of the actual classes, focusing on getting a pro deal instead. I think they should let kids who play high profile sports go back and get a free degree when they are done pursuing professional sports... that'd make it a little more fair.