If you consider Lavine a pg he could be 6th.
Why am I not surprised !!At best.
Yikes
he isn't a consistent shooter. And to play in the NBA you better be able to knock down open looks. Still think he will be a very good NBA player but thats why he is falling
What's wrong with getting picked 18th? Yeesh.
BTW JB was wrong. If you are a first round pick you leave He's going to make millions of dollars. I think JB just wanted his team to be better next year
the difference of money is pretty big once you get out of the lottery, good for ennis but it wasn't a home run decisionBTW JB was wrong. If you are a first round pick you leave He's going to make millions of dollars. I think JB just wanted his team to be better next year
the difference of money is pretty big once you get out of the lottery, good for ennis but it wasn't a home run decision
Puhleeze.
Gotta love all the draft "experts" on this board. I guess Donte going 18th & making millions was a "bad decision" as well?
Ridiculous. SMDH
Even better- he went 28th (my bad) and STILL made millions.Speaking of draft "experts," Donte didn't go 18th.
Even better- he went 28th (my bad) and STILL made millions.
Ennis is drafted 18th so he most likely in a better position moving forward.
All due respect, but neither you nor I have any idea what "the best strategic career decisions" are for any of these kids. We have our opinions, but obviously we are not athletes nor do we share the life experiences of most of these kids. I prefer to give them the benefit of the doubt. We can both give examples of successes and failures on either side of this situation. You call Donte Greene, I raise you Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green, and Chandler Parsons.What you seem to either intentionally ignore or not understand is that a professional career isn't just about a one time money grab. The guaranteed money at the end of the first round--at #28 where Donte was drafted--is under $1M per year. Approx. $900k today; not sure what it was several years ago when Donte entered the league, but possibly significantly less, adjusted for time. So even landing that contract isn't great compared to what might prospectively happen if you return for a year and go around #15, where the rookie pay scale is approx. $1.5.
The ROI on the second option surpasses option #1 in just over one year. Let that sink in for a second. So if the point is: Donte made some money--BFD. He could have made a lot more had he made a better decision, even if his career ended up being the one-contract money grab that it [so far] has ended up being.
Perhaps if he'd remained in college for another year, maybe he would have been more prepared to contribute at the next level, and possibly even earned a second contract. I wonder what that might have done for his net worth.
This really isn't a difficult concept to grasp. Professional athletes have a limited shelf life of earning potential, and it behooves them to make the best strategic career decisions to maximize their potential earnings. Earning some quick cash doesn't amount to maximizing potential earnings, which is why Donte is a tremendously poor example to point to.
http://basketball.realgm.com/nba/info/rookie_scale
All due respect, but neither you nor I have any idea what "the best strategic career decisions" are for any of these kids. We have our opinions, but obviously we are not athletes nor do we share the life experiences of most of these kids. I prefer to give them the benefit of the doubt. We can both give examples of successes and failures on either side of this situation. You call Donte Greene, I raise you Kawhi Leonard, Danny Green, and Chandler Parsons.
I stand by my call on Donte and Jerami in that they made the right decisions FOR THEM, and I honestly believe that if you asked them, they wouldn't change a thing. The rest of this message board fodder is just rhetoric.
Congrats and good luck to them. JMHO.