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Are things about to get interesting with BB?

On a related note to figuring out the current NCAA eligibility rules, do the amateurism rules not exist anymore? How is it allowable that these European pros are coming to play in college? If those guys can play, can guys in the G League (or even fringe NBA guys) who still have eligibility come back to college and make way more than they make in the G League? If not, what’s the difference?
 
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On a related note to figuring out the current NCAA eligibility rules, do the amateurism rules not exist anymore? How is it allowable that these European pros are coming to play in college? If those guys can play, can guys in the G League (or even fringe NBA guys) who still have eligibility come back to college and make way more than they make in the G League? If not, what’s the difference?
I know there are different rules for American born and international born players, but everything is being so stretched now that I honestly don't know what they are any more. These seeming loopholes in the rules were a moot point when the guy was already making $500k to play in his home country before being drafted in the NCA, but now that college hoops in the USA is the second highest paying game around it's a totally different deal.
 
On a related note to figuring out the current NCAA eligibility rules, do the amateurism rules not exist anymore? How is it allowable that these European pros are coming to play in college? If those guys can play, can guys in the G League (or even fringe NBA guys) who still have eligibility come back to college and make way more than they make in the G League? If not, what’s the difference?
After Illinois got a commitment from its second professional player - I texted Illini son that NU was pursing LeBron and Giannis who both have four years of eligibility. But honestly what is to stop a guy who goes straight to the g league from high school from deciding at 22 when it’s clear he’s not going to the NBA from going to school and getting paid and getting a degree?

Here is the best take I’ve seen on this:

 
After Illinois got a commitment from its second professional player - I texted Illini son that NU was pursing LeBron and Giannis who both have four years of eligibility. But honestly what is to stop a guy who goes straight to the g league from high school from deciding at 22 when it’s clear he’s not going to the NBA from going to school and getting paid and getting a degree?

Here is the best take I’ve seen on this:

This would be a pretty great system. An alternative to the one time free transfer would be allowing scholarships to be guaranteed for a number of years, which is a two-way commitment. Can't transfer, can't cut a kid. Ties to their revenue sharing piece effectively just a binding contract.

I can think of a million variants of that, like you get one free transfer after your second year, or something, but the team you transfer to can negotiate a multi year deal or the player can negotiate a series of one year deals and hit the portal. Amything like that.
 
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