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Six High School Players Declare for NFL Draft
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slu...v=ap&type=lgns
Guess it's time I get my son ramped up! :D Quote:
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I wonder where or if they will be drafted?
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I wonder if they don't get drafted if they'll still be able to go to college or if this is like the NBA and they'll be screwed...
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Anyone know if those guys were any good in HS or are they just doing it as a joke?
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I checked the ESPN recruiting database, and none of them are in it, which means none of them are going to a D1 school. I have to assume its a joke then. :rolleyes: |
http://www.applingpirates.com/football/rosterindex.htm
This is the Appling County roster where "Earl Fields" supposedly played defensive tackle. Notice anyone missing from the roster? |
The agents got a hold of them more than likely. They just ruined their college career. The minute you sign with an agent, you are hosed.
Anyways, any high schooler who thinks he can hang with Men has another thing coming. I think Clarett is one wake up shot from someone like Derrick Brooks, Ray Lewis, John Lynch...etc from realizing, he will have a lot of work to do. |
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Dont check ESPN. They just rip off Insiders or Rivals |
Reading the positions makes me realize another reason why it's not beneficial to skip college ball. Besides the obvious argument about maturity and physical skills at that age, how many players had to learn an entirely new position in college? One of those H.S. players listed is a quarterback. How many NFL defensive backs, running backs and receivers spent time at quarterback in high school? A lot of them. One of my favorite things to learn about NFL players is there high school position because it was usually complete different than the position they're known for in the NFL.
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So to sum it all up...the NFL is becoming a lot like the NBA then?
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The NFLPA should look into establishing guidelines for NFL players eligability. It might be the loophole that is needed to protect the game, the NFL, and veteran players. Think about it. To be a teacher you need a degree. To be a doctor you need a degree. I think that an associates degree to play NFL ball is not too much to ask.
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Probably for most of them it was a joke. I hope they're ready to get their asses kicked in the NFL:D
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None of them will be drafted, and if they were not on recruiting list, they probably weren't going to play Div 1 either. I wonder if they are qualification casualties. If so, then that is the good thing about this. Maybe these guys can now go to Europe and develop since they can't get into college.
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If it's like other sports, simply declaring for the draft prior to entering school does not sacrifice eligibility (it doesn't in hockey, anyway). Oddly enough, as soon as a student-athlete is enrolled, declaring for the draft DOES sacrifice eligibility, because they haven't reformed the in-school rules yet.
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Can any of the leagues insist requirements that can be legal and upheld? Can the NFL and NBA institute an age limit? Can the NFL argue that three years of experience is required to play in the NFL based on a "talent" standpoint?
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Yes. Whether they could get it raised as high as 20 or 21 is debatable, but there is one of 14 in the US and I think it is 18 for certain industries. You have to prove that the safety of the workers would be in jeopardy. Whether the NFL could do that is debatable (I think they could given the vast number of long-term injuries NFL players suffer.) |
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If I remember correctly, players don't delcare for the draft in hockey. I know they don't in baseball (thus you see Michael Vick getting drafted by an MLB club). In basketball players can declare and return if they don't sign with an agent, though if they don't sign with an agent they have to put forth the money to attend workouts on their own. |
If I were not able to get to a college program for one reason or another, I would probably declare for the draft. What could it hurt?
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Are you talking NFL or FOF? ![]() |
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That's why the have JUCO football. Anyone can get an offer. If your too lazy to do some work in high school, then do you really deserve the big-pay contract? Not only is the NFL alot more physical, it's a much bigger mental game as well. |
Quarterback John Belisle doesn't appear to have made his varsity high school team either.
hxxp://www.capac.k12.mi.us/hswebsite/Athletics/Football/VarsityFootball.htm |
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But he did get his name in the paper:) |
Here's a story of a 19-year old who played in the NFL back in 'da day.
http://cbs.sportsline.com/nfl/story/7078177 |
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Looks like none of them did. I'm not sure if McCrae played or not though, his school doesn't have thir roster up. hxxp://www.pasadena.edu/athletics/football/players.cfm Joe Banks probably didn't play much organized football at a school that only has four teachers. hxxp://www.mansef.org/baltimore_county/new_directions.html You already showed John Belisle's school. Earl Fields' school was posted by digamma. Joe Lee's school doesn't have much of a site and I couldn't find anything else. hxxp://www.fp.k12.wa.us/FPSD/2/Gates/index.html Ethan Mitchell isn't mentioned at the RB position in a writeup of the Flowers' team. hxxp://www.sportscombine.com/scripts/p_tm_news.asp Ken Petitt I have no idea on because the link from the Detroit Public Scools site isn't loading and I couldn't find anything else except win-loss records. hxxp://schools.detroitk12.org/Redford/ |
This is actually pretty funny. :D
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What about an application fee to apply for entrance into the draft. Say $100,000.00 per player and the entrance fee can be waived if sponsored by "approved" members/schools.
The NFLPA requirements will not work as you do not have to be a Union member to play in the NFL.(Lavar Arington) The Degree requirment would not float as about 75% of your players would find themselves inelgible for work. It is a legal solution. I am pretty sure there is no legal problems with requiring employees to submit an entrance/addmission fee. All the NFL would have to do is make the "Combine" the only requirement for entering the draft. Then charge a nonrefundable $100,000 fee to take the combine entrance exam. Of course if the canidate is sponsored by an approved member/school then the fee could be waived. |
That sounds like a quick way to get sued for discriminating against people who can't afford to pay $100k to work out.
You would also see agents paying the money for top prospects. |
Why isnt Arrington in the Union?
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how did eric swann get drafted? he never played in college, though i dont remember the details...
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He played semi pro for a few years and maybe Community college
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Swann must have been a workout freak
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why is anyone angered by this? I think it's funny as hell. As I said in another thread (which was posted after this one), If this had happened my senior year - I would have applied in a heartbeat. You get your name in the paper, have some fun, get dressed in a suit, go the draft - and express mock outrage when you aren't selected.
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Eventually some Lebron James dude is going to come out of high school and a team will eat their words and draft him. It's classic game theory and eventually someone will blink and then it'll be all in. It's inevitible Mr. Anderson.
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I believe it has something to do with him not joining due to thinking he should get a bigger cut of the NFLPA licensing deal. |
He's part of the union. He's just not part of the licensing agreement. Just like Jordan wasn't in the NBA and Barry Bonds isn't in MLB, because they negotiate their own licensing rights, rather than get the blanket fee from the players association.
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Good theory, but still wouldn't work. Not sure if you could. Now, if the NFLPA and NFL has a iron-clad agreement, isn't that legal? |
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Players who enter college as a young 17 will still have to opt into the draft after their first year in college to be included in the draft, and if they do so, they lose their eligibility. An example of this would be Ricky DiPietro, who opted in because he was expecting to go high in a draft that was considered relatively weak for goaltenders (while IIRC the following draft, which he would have entered automatically and not sacrificed eligibility, was considered a stronger one so he would not have gone as high). Players who enter as an older 17, or at 18, will be automatically eligible after their first college year, but also may opt into the draft in their year before college (which may be a senior year in high school or it might be a postgrad year). Now that the pre-enrollment amateurism rules have been reformed, opting into the draft prior to enrollment in school does not (in and of itself) cost a player their eligibility. (The idea is that merely being drafted does not provide a player a "competitive advantage".) |
If i was the NFL i would set-up a rule(doesnt even have to be written) where all the teams agree to not dradt guys out of highschool or until thwy finish three years of college. This way they keep the same rules just without the legal issues...
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That's a dictionary-quality definition of collusion, and you can't do that. The rule will get struck down as soon as it's proven. |
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I don't exactly think that collusion would clear up the legal issues. |
I like to see is for the NFL to require all players to fully partake in the NFL Combine.
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Shit, I'd even go as far to put a highlight tape together. Gather all your buddies up and record a street football game, making yourself look real good. Also important is the post-game interview where you must refer to yourself in the third person. |
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No, it would be fabulous if someone put themself in Madden, recorded highlites of their player making great plays, and sent it to all the teams prior to the draft. |
ESPN.com news services
NEW YORK -- Six high school players and one junior college defensive back joined Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett and USC wide receiver Mike Williams Friday on the NFL's list of nine applicants cleared for early eligibility in the draft. After Clarett and Williams, the best player would figure to be Ronnie McCrae of Pasadena (Calif.) City College. However, McCrae, a defensive back, had no interceptions for a team that went 0-10, according to The Washington Post. If not McCrae, perhaps the best is offensive tackle Ken Petitt of Redford High School in Michigan. He was an honorable mention selection on the Detroit News 2002 all-Detroit football team. None of the high school players is among the top 25 college prospects by position, according to Tom Lemming, editor of Prep Football Report and ESPN.com's recruiting guru, who said Friday he had heard of none of them. And, no wonder. They appear to be more suspect than prospect. Running back Ethan Mitchell of Springdale, Md., and Flowers High School, never played for the varsity, while running back Joe Banks is from New Directions Academy High School, a Baltimore school for developmentally disabled children, according to the Post. Quarterback John Belisle of Capac (Mich.) Community High School and defensive tackle Earl Fields of Appling County High School in Baxley, Ga., were not on their school's 2003 rosters, while wide receiver Joe Lee of Tacoma, Wash., lists Gates High School, an alternative school that doesn't even have a football team, the Post reports. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said the list was based on those who submitted written applications by the March 1 deadline. Applicants were given 72 hours to withdraw. Most scouts and league officials believe the jump is far too great for most underclassmen and even the most talented high school players. Williams, who played two seasons in college, is expected to be a first-round pick while Clarett is thought to be a potential second- or third-rounder. Clarett went to court to challenge the NFL's rule preventing players less than three years out of high school from entering the draft, and a federal judge ruled in his favor. "I don't think we do any extensive checking [of the applicants] because there's no point to it based on the ruling," Aiello said. "We can't limit who's eligible under this ruling." Information from The Associated Press was used in this report. |
Little-know fact: I declared for the NBA draft.
It was for a creative journalism class and for my final project I declared for the NBA draft and documented my application. The point was to illustrate how ridiculous sports marketing and the hyping of athletes was. I hired an "agent" -- neighbor from across the hall -- and found some people who would say that I was an awesome baller. All my materials came from Players International Group Marketing -- or PIG Marketing. I know the NBA received my application, but I never appeared on any draft lists so they clearly sniffed me out tossed me in the circular file. These high school guys crack me up. Good stuff! |
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I do not belive this for a second. While I do not expect to see a High Schooler make an immediate impact in the NFL using your 6th or 7th round pick on a long shot is pretty much the NFL norm. I have seen the world's fastest man drafted, Carl Lewis, the world's "Baddest" man drafted, John Wayne, and throw in a couple of Baseball players under long term multimillion dollar contracts Bo Jackson and now Drew Henson who were all considered major long shots to ever step foot on a football field. Using a late round pick to select a potential all star is pretty much the norm in the other 3 sports. Hiding him on your roster for the next couple of years can't be that hard. And, yes dear their are can't miss high school football players out there. How many of you would of liked you team to give up a 7th round pick 4yrs ago to select the number 1 highschool football player....Chris Simms? |
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Crissy? Nope. But there a plenty who would thrown one out there for Mike Vick coming out of highschool (though he would have most likely had to agree to play running back). |
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I don't think football teams want to wait. They don't have the time to sit and wait for a player they have to get ready. Football is very depth-oriented, and the salary cap limits the money they can invest. Baseball and Hockey have minors, and they have their rights, so they do not have to sign them right away. |
That's why the NFL needs a real minor league, not this NFL Europe crap. What's their aversion to a real US summer football league? It's not like fans would be upset about it.
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Marketing. With NFL Europe they can try to extend their fan base beyond the US, though with a US league it's doubtful they gain much in the way of fans. |
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