Lodi News-Sentinel

NBA hopefuls are bypassing college and carving paths less traveled

- By Shannon Ryan

CHICAGO — Darius Bazley isn’t out to change the college basketball landscape or even inspire other young players.

As a potential preps-to-pros player and former five-star recruit, the 6-foot-9 forward from Cincinnati is a unique athlete trying to win over NBA scouts without having played last season.

He decommitte­d from Syracuse. He reneged on his initial idea to play in the G League. Unlike other players in the past who skipped college looking for an alternate route to the NBA, he didn’t play overseas for a year either.

Instead, Bazley was on no team and worked as an intern for New Balance in a carefully constructe­d endorsemen­t deal that will pay $1 million. But don’t call him a pioneer.

“I’m not a basketball activist,” Bazley said this week at the NBA draft combine at Quest Multisport in Chicago. “I just did what was best for me. I think the options for players, there’s a lot of them. They’re out there.”

But until the NBA changes its age-limit rule — which it’s expected to do in the near future — players who aren’t keen on playing in college for a year must get creative.

Jalen Lecque, who also participat­ed at the combine, played at the New Hampshire prep school Brewster Academy as a fifth-year high school student last season. He still can withdraw from the draft by the May 29 deadline and fulfill a scholarshi­p awaiting him at North Carolina State.

Lecque, a 6-3 guard from New York, was a top-35 recruit in the 2019 class. He apparently performed well enough Thursday, recording the event’s top vertical leap of 43 inches, and opted out of Friday’s scrimmages.

“There are other options to get here (besides college),” Lecque said. “I’m just trying to fulfill my dream of trying to get to the NBA. If I have to go to college to do it, I just want to get there and be successful there.”

The rules that have steered high school players to attend college for at least a year are shifting.

Currently, players must be 19 years old and one year removed from their original high school class to be eligible for the NBA draft. That system essentiall­y has created the era of the one-and-done player who competes in college as a freshman before jumping to the pros.

The NBA submitted a formal proposal to the National Basketball Players Associatio­n to lower the eligibilit­y age to 18, a rule change that many expect to kick in before the 2022 draft.

New rules by the NCAA’s board of governors and Division I board of directors following an FBI investigat­ion into college basketball recruiting allow players to hire agents for the draft process and retain their eligibilit­y. Under previous rules, players with remaining college eligibilit­y could not hire an agent, and if they did, they forfeited their option to return to school.

“There shouldn’t be any barriers,” Lecque said. “If a guy is ready his senior year (of high school), go. If a guy is not ready, go to college. I feel like there should be a choice.”

As players await more changes, a few carve out their own paths.

Brandon Jennings was the first to find a loophole after the NBA imposed the age-limit rule in 2006. He skipped college and played in Italy for a year before entering the 2009 draft, in which the Bucks selected him 10th.

Emmanuel Mudiay opted out of his commitment to SMU and played in China before being selected No. 7 by the Nuggets in 2015. Terrance Ferguson decommitte­d from Louisville and played in Australia before the Thunder drafted him at No. 21 in 2017.

Anfernee Simons sat out a year and was selected 24th in the 2018 draft by the Trail Blazers. Mitchell Robinson was taken 36th in that draft after decommitti­ng from Western Kentucky to work on his game.

Certain elite prospects who are at least 18 can sign G League “select contracts” of $125,000. Bazley reconsider­ed after saying that was his plan.

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