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WELCOME TO NEW CLASS: CYNICISM 101.


Byline: KEVIN MODESTI

When the NBA NBA
abbr.
1. National Basketball Association

2. National Boxing Association

NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (=
 and its players' union agreed last summer to effectively bar high school stars from jumping straight into the draft, the league accomplished something I thought was impossible: It dumped another layer of cynicism on college basketball College basketball most often refers to the American basketball competitive governance structure established by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA. History
Further information: NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship records
, which was rim-deep already.

This hits home with the speculation that O.J. Mayo Ovinton J'Anthony "O.J." Mayo, (born November 5, 1987 in Huntington, West Virginia), is a college basketball player for the University of Southern California (USC). As a student at Huntington High School, in Huntington, West Virginia, he was considered by several media outlets to , the slippery-named 18-year-old from Ohio, might announce this week that he's coming to USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. .

Let's say it happens.

OK for O.J., a soon-to-be-senior high school guard who will have to play somewhere in 2007-08 while waiting for his NBA eligibility to kick in, since the rule changes prevent him from going straight from driver's ed to No. 1 in the draft the way Kwame Brown, LeBron James LeBron James (born December 30 1984) is an American professional basketball player who currently plays for the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association (NBA).  and Dwight Howard Dwight David Howard (born December 8, 1985, in Atlanta, Georgia[1]) is an American basketball player for the Orlando Magic of the National Basketball Association (NBA).  did.

OK for the Trojans, the long-frustrated program that can use Mayo's talent and glamour to kick-start the new era that begins with the opening of the Galen Center History
USC had planned to build an on-campus indoor arena for over 100 years. Before the Galen Center, USC basketball had been played at a variety of locations, including the neighboring Shrine Auditorium stage, the old Pan-Pacific Auditorium in the Fairfax District, and since
 this fall at the corner of Jefferson and Figueroa.

Not OK for college basketball's image, which wasn't all ivy-covered walls and fight songs to begin with.

Now, hold on, you say. Wasn't it supposed to be a boon to both pro and college basketball when the NBA required players to wait until they're 19 and their graduation class has been out of high school for a year before they go into the draft? Wasn't it supposed to guarantee more polished talent for the pros and just plain more talent for the colleges? Wasn't this supposed to be a step back to the good old days, before ``hardship'' cases and that whole slippery slope 'slippery slope' Medical ethics An ethical continuum or 'slope,' the impact of which has been incompletely explored, and which itself raises moral questions that are even more on the ethical 'edge' than the original issue , before the concept of the Student-Athlete gave way to the Pro Athlete in Training?

Yes, it was supposed to be.

I've read fanciful speculation that NBA-minded young studs, forced to spend a year in college, will discover the wonders of dorm life and biology labs and decide to enjoy the campus experience for four years.

But, of course, that's not what's going to happen, at least not often enough to count.

What's going to happen is that teenage stars are going to go to college because they have no choice. They're going to go for one season and only one season and then start cashing those Milwaukee Bucks The Milwaukee Bucks are a professional basketball team based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. They play in the National Basketball Association (NBA). The current franchise owner is U.S. Senator Herb Kohl.  paychecks. They're going to go to a school whose basketball program has nothing to lose, in a big city to maximize the name-recognition factor, with a coach qualified to offer NBA career guidance.

That is, they're going to be Ovinton J'Anthony Mayo, said to be eyeing several colleges, including USC, which has never had a basketball recruit this good, which affords the natural marketing advantages of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , and which is coached by former Chicago Bulls The Chicago Bulls are a professional basketball team based in Chicago, Illinois. They play in the National Basketball Association. The team was founded in 1966, and has won six NBA Championships since.  and New Orleans Hornets The New Orleans Hornets are a professional basketball team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. They play in the Southwest Division of the National Basketball Association (NBA).  boss Tim Floyd.

It might be that in O.J. Mayo's case -- as in all such cases -- the kid and the coach play by all the academic and athletic rules, and nobody gets hurt.

Still, it will look as if both sides are gaming the system, the sort of mutual exploitation that's the hallmark of big-time college sports. And more than ever, given the naked economic motives involved, there will be suspicions about the roles of the middlemen who populate the hoops world.

How much farther could we get from the college sports ideal?

Think of this as the unintended consequence of a well-meant attempt to raise basketball's maturity level.

The NBA is perfectly within its rights when it raises its standards of eligibility.

Still, there's something vaguely un-American about setting an age limit for employment in a profession that, on the seriousness scale, rates somewhere below airline pilot and heart surgeon. As commissioner David Stern used to point out in defending the old policy, nobody wrings their hands because tennis players and figure skaters go from high school to the pros.

Now, more than ever, 18-year-old basketball players will be sitting in college classrooms not because they want to but because they have to. Gee, what could go wrong?

With one draft (last week's) in the books under the new rule, there's been nothing to contradict the arguments of Arizona coach Lute Olson, who voiced his concerns as soon as the change was announced in June 2005. Olson called it a ``stop-gap measure (that) gives the NBA the ability to say that they did something about the problem.''

``Very seldom does one year of college benefit either the player or the program,'' Olson said then, noting that increased speculation ``about who might be leaving and who might be staying'' will force coaches to constantly recruit to replace one-and-out stars.

Duke's Mike Krzyzewski has made a sensible suggestion: The NBA should either reopen the doors to high-school players, or require at least twoyears of college.

Mayo, a 6-foot-5, 205-pound point guard who has played high school varsity ball in Ashland, Ky., and Cincinnati since he was a seventh-grader, almost certainly will be one of those one-and-out stars, whether he chooses USC or Kansas State or somewhere else. We could hear more about his plans during this week's ABCD See CompTIA.  Camp in New Jersey.

Mayo won't be the only great young player in this fix. USC won't be the only university trying to take advantage. This will become a pattern, and that's a problem for a sport marked by onemonth of madness and 11months of cynicism.

heymodesti(AT_SIGN)aol.com

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Title Annotation:Sports
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jul 6, 2006
Words:898
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