The Mercury News Weekend

Top prep recruits choose G League option over college

- Staff and wire report

Five- star recruit Jalen Green will skip college and instead enter the NBA G League’s freshly revamped profession­al pathway program, becoming the first player to do so in a major landmark for the NBA.

Fellow five- star recruit Isaiah Todd, who decommitte­d from Michigan earlier this week, will also join the G League program, according to The Athletic, pairing with Green on a new team in Southern California.

According to ESPN, the reshaped program will group elite prospects on one team and pay them each at least $500,000, while serving as a one-year developmen­t program before they are eligible to enter the NBA draft.

Per ESPN, the program was bolstered after urging from NBA commission­er Adam Silver, who wanted the G League to interest players that might try to play profession­ally in Australia, as LaMelo Ball and RJ Hampton did this year. Talks with the NBA Players Associatio­n about eliminatin­g the NBA’s one-and-done rule have gone nowhere, per ESPN.

“We have kids leaving the United States — Texas and California and Georgia — to go around the world to play, and our NBA community has to travel there to scout them,” G League president Shareef Abdur-Rahim, the former Cal star, told ESPN. “That’s counterint­uitive. The NBA is the best developmen­t system in the world, and those players shouldn’t have to go somewhere else to develop for a year. They should be in our developmen­t system.”

The new G League system quadruples the previous player salary ($125,000) and will provide financial incentives for participat­ion in games, community events and life skills programs, according to ESPN. The developmen­t team will focus on training and exhibition games, facing G League teams — about 10-12 games — but also internatio­nal and academy teams.

Green, a 6-foot-5 combo guard from Fresno who spent a year at Napa’s Prolific Prep, made a formal announceme­nt of his decision on social media Thursday, and the league welcomed him with a press release.

“We’re thrilled to welcome a player and a person of Jalen’s caliber to the NBA G League,” Abdur-Rahim said in a statement. “He represents the next generation of NBA players, and we couldn’t be more excited to have him develop his profession­al skills in our league. Jalen will learn from an NBA-caliber coaching and player developmen­t staff as he begins his profession­al basketball journey.”

Green is ranked as the No. 3 overall prospect by the 247Sports Composite. He is also the nation’s No. 2 combo guard and the No. 2 player in the state of California, per the index.

Following a season in the G League, Green would be eligible for the 2021 NBA draft.

Green, who turned 18 in February, won gold medals with USA Basketball at the FIBA U17 and U19 World Championsh­ips in 2018 and 2019.

Todd, a 6-foot-10 prospect from Raleigh, North Carolina, announced Tuesday that he was decommitti­ng from Michigan in favor of playing profession­ally for a year.

He is ranked as the No. 13 prospect in the nation by the 247Sports Composite, as well as the No. 2 power forward.

 ?? ELSA — GETTY IMAGES ?? Jalen Green, a Fresno native who played at Napa’s Prolific Prep, will pass on college and join the NBA G League.
ELSA — GETTY IMAGES Jalen Green, a Fresno native who played at Napa’s Prolific Prep, will pass on college and join the NBA G League.

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