Wapakoneta Daily News

New league for prep standouts sends 2 players to NBA combine

- By PAT GRAHAM

They took a chance on each other: The teenage power forward from New Jersey

on the start-up league. The start-up league on the young player with immense talent.

Dominick Barlow received on-thejob training — and a six-figure salary — to skip college and join Overtime Elite, a new

basketball league created to give high

school players another path to the pros. He learned about nutrition, social-media

skills and financial literacy as he immersed himself in hoops.

He has parlayed his time with OTE into an

invitation to the NBA

draft combine this week in Chicago.

For the league, it demonstrat­es there’s room for yet another

option beyond the convention­al route through the college ranks, the NBA’S G League Ignite or playing overseas.

“This just shows how big this industry is,”

said Jay Bilas, a basketball analyst for ESPN. “There’s not

just one way to be successful and have a productive and long career.”

There were almost as many OTE players (Barlow and guard Jean Montero) invited

to the combine as from Kansas, the NCAA champion *(Ochai Agbaji, Christian

Braun, Jalen Wilson ).

Over the next few days, they will participat­e in games, drills

and go through interviews. It’s a chance to

possibly move up a team’s draft

board. Montero and Barlow are both currently forecast as second-round picks (although, some mock

drafts have Montero going late in the first ).

Coming out of high school, Barlow wasn’t a five-star recruit. He

had suitors — Depaul, Illinois and Florida among them, according to Rivals.com —

but elected to go with

the league that guarantees at least $100,000, along with shares in the company (Overtime) and other revenue streams through

sales of custom jerseys, trading cards, video games, and NFTS.

Barlow learned about nutrition and

simple lessons like how to balance his plate after a heavy workout. He took a course on media training and on expanding

his brand on social media. He also worked with the assistant coaches in practice sessions and was

supervised by head coach Kevin Ollie, who guided Connecticu­t to a national title in 2014.

The 26 players who formed the inaugural OTE class were divided into three teams and played a full schedule against prep schools and each other. The 6-foot-9 Barlow was on Team

Overtime, along with Montero, where he averaged 14.8 points. Barlow shot 58.5% from mid-range and

33.9% from 3-point land.

Oftentimes, in front of scouts. Throughout the year, more than

300 pro scouts passed through the complex.

“This put him in position probably much faster than anybody would have imagined,” said Brandon Williams, the head of

basketball operations at OTE who had stops in the NBA with Golden State, San Antonio and Atlanta. “Much like a flower, you need the proper nutrients to blossom. That’s what we were able to do here.”

One major thing college basketball does

have: Exposure. The television deals and the NCAA Tournament provide a powerful draw even for players who only plan to stick around for one

season. There’s also burgeoning name, image and likeness opportunit­ies.

“Most basketball fans have no idea who the G League players

are until they get drafted. Same thing with Overtime Elite,”

Bilas said. “The college players you know — Ja Morant or Zion Williamson or whoever. But you can really improve — improve your skill set and your game in the G league or Overtime Elite.”

Barlow is attempting to make an even bigger name for himself at the combine. Other players invited

include Auburn’s Jabari Smith, Duke’s Paolo Banchero and Gonzaga’s Chet Holmgren — all of whom could be taken No. 1

overall by Orlando. Jaden Hardy is among

several players from the NBA G League Ignite, a team based in the San Francisco area that’s dedicated to developing top young prospects.

“I do understand that going into the combine, there are

some older guys who may be a little bit more physically developed than we are just because we’re so young,”

said Barlow, who would be eligible to return to OTE if he’s

not drafted. “But I think we’re some of the most talented young basketball players in the world.”

Barlow has helped set the foundation for what could be big

things ahead. In next year’s NBA draft, OTE

players such as twins Ausar and Amen Thompson are projected to be lottery picks.

“We don’t have the history of some of the

blueblood schools,” Williams said. “We

have to embrace that difference. There’s this revolution­ary group that embraced

it as well, that wants to play where it matters. They want to line up against the best talent. You get charged up when you know that you’ve got to fight.”

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