NBA gets defensive with Congress

21 07 2009

The Associated Press reported on Monday that the NBA has defended its minimum age requirement to Congress through official correspondence. My last post was about U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.), and he was the lucky recipient of a letter from NBA President Joel Litvin. In the letter, Litvin said that the age policy protects the NBA’s business interests by “increasing the chances that incoming players will have the requisite ability, experience, maturity and life skills” to compete at the pro level.

Litvin added that the policy helps teams make better personnel decisions, gives players an extra year to mature and develop, and does not force players to attend college against their wishes. Litvin pointed out that many employers require job candidates to have post-high school experience and turned the tables on Cohen by reminding him that there are age requirements for the House, Senate, and White House.

In a written response to Litvin, Cohen stuck to his guns and said the players should have the “economic freedom” to join the NBA from high school. Cohen is on the House Judiciary Committee and has requested a meeting with Litvin and NBA Commissioner David Stern. If the age requirement remains part of the league’s current collective bargaining policy, Cohen has said he’ll consider both holding hearings and proposing legislation.

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      WASHINGTON (AP) — The NBA defended its minimum age requirement to Congress, but a critical lawmaker was unmoved and is asking to meet with top league officials to discuss it, according to letters obtained Monday by the Associated Press.

      The rule, which is part of the league’s collective bargaining agreement with the players union, requires that players be at least 19 years old and a year out of high school before entering the league. Last month, Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen urged the league and union to scrap the requirement in the next collective bargaining agreement, calling it unfair.

      NBA President Joel Litvin told Cohen in a recent letter the purpose of the requirement is to promote the league’s business interests by “increasing the chances that incoming players will have the requisite ability, experience, maturity and life skills” to perform at a high level. The policy also helps teams make informed hiring decisions, he wrote.

      In addition, he said, players get an extra year to mature and develop, making it more likely they can handle the challenges of being an NBA player.

      Litvin said the policy is motivated by “business considerations,” not a desire to force players to attend college against their wishes.

      FIND MORE STORIES IN: Steve Cohen

      He wrote that many employers require job candidates to have post-high school experience, and that the U.S. Constitution sets minimum ages for House of Representatives members, senators and the president. Given that, “we do not understand your objection” to the rule, Litvin wrote.

      In a letter sent to Litvin on Monday, Cohen maintained that players should have the “economic freedom” to make their own decisions. He said he understood that the policy may help the league in its scouting and hiring decisions.

      “However, my concern is that the players who must abide by this rule are harmed by the league’s pursuit of these business interests,” the congressman wrote, adding that the “age discrimination” prevents players from supporting their families.

      The policy increases the chance that such players will be injured before getting the chance to play in the NBA, he added.

      “I am concerned that the careers of young men who possess all the skills necessary to succeed in the NBA,” Cohen wrote, “may be sacrificed in favor of the bottom lines of the teams on which they hope to play.”

      Cohen, a member of the House Judiciary Committee, asked for a meeting with Litvin and Commissioner David Stern. Cohen has said that that he’d consider both hearings and legislation if the requirement remains.

      Neither the NBA nor the union immediately responded to requests for comment Monday.

      Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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          Comments: (23)

          Showing:   Newest first Oldest first Most recommended New: Most recommended!
          User Image
          STDREAM (0 friends, send message) wrote: 8h 58m ago
          If an 18 year old can serve this country in the military, they should be able to play any professional -ball that is offered in this country. At the end of the day it will still be what it always is-discrimination by the NBA and their farm-league,the NCAA. I guess foreign ballplayers mature faster than the kids here in the U.S., since they can play at under 18 in a lot of these . Expect to see more 17 and 18 year-old american basketball players leaving the country for the opportunities thaty are available outside the USA.
          User Image
          reecedawg (9 friends, send message) wrote: 21h 19m ago
          DUMBEST RULE EVER……….we have 16 yr old pro tennis players and golfers why not basketball, kids are smart though, keep em out now and they get paid to go overseas and play right out of highschool.
          User Image
          odie (0 friends, send message) wrote: 17h 30m ago
          Playing in professional sports ought to be like having a drivers license! It should be a priviledge, not a god given right. Maybe sports can eliminate some of the problem childs before they prove they didn’t deserve the chance in the first place.
          User Image
          hurls (7 friends, send message) wrote: 19h 22m ago
          Wait until the NBA, and other professional sports come into the same arena as corporate America. The majority of corporate America is now, more and more making a bachelors degree a “minimum” requirement for even low level jobs. This has been a result of being sued because someone got the job over another gender or race. Can you imagine if the NBA made a college degree (not attending, but legitimate degree) before they let anyone play in the NBA. Good bye Kobe, Lebron, etc., etc.

          Personally, I think the existing rule is perfect. These young men already have a hard time with the sudden wealth, attention and the lack of maturity to handle it.

          User Image
          louisianatiger19 (0 friends, send message) wrote: 1h 40m ago
          Is anyone else sick and tired of Congress meddling in sports? Don’t they have enough problems in Washington to take care of? If they want to get into sports, they should declare the Nationals a federal disaster area.
          User Image
          sullysul (14 friends, send message) wrote: 12h 55m ago
          Why don’t they do this in Golf? Tennis? Figure-skating? Baseball? It’s all a lie. It’s not about age. It’s about dollars and yes it makes cents.
          User Image
          vincents60 (0 friends, send message) wrote: 20h 18m ago
          Amazing, we elect these idiots to run our country. I suggest Cohen gets back to doing the work the people elected him to do. We have too many congressmen with their nose in something that in no way resembles the job they were elected to. I suggest either he drops this and get back to doing his job or resign and let someone who cares about this country take his place
          User Image
          rford1001 (0 friends, send message) wrote: 21h 8m ago
          I thought there was rules that didn’t allow somebody to judge you on age and race
          User Image
          rford1001 (0 friends, send message) wrote: 21h 9m ago
          The problem is they already let the young players in and they made themselves into all stars so how can you stop it now. Sounds to me that college basketball had a hand in trying to keep them there.
          User Image
          ROSSJW1 (0 friends, send message) wrote: 1h ago
          I want congress to step in. This rule is racist and serves no real purpose other than making kids go to college so the NCAA can PIMP them!
          More comments on this story: 1 2 3 Next





The ‘godfather of basketball’

22 06 2009

For John Paul “Sonny” Vaccaro, there are three things more important than anything else in life: “The God you believe in, your family, and earning a living.”

Vaccaro certainly made good on the last point, spending nearly three decades as a highly successful shoe company marketing executive and trusted adviser to some of the greatest basketball players ever seen.

The man who signed Michael Jordan to his first sneaker deal in 1984 and has served as a close confidant to the likes of Kobe Bryant, Tracy McGrady and LeBron James, to name a few, stepped away from his professional career two years ago.

Vaccaro, however, remains an influential figure in basketball. With Vaccaro’s assistance, Brandon Jennings, a talented point guard from Compton, Calif., left to play professionally in Italy after high school last year, forgoing college altogether.

Earlier this year, Vaccaro gave the same blessing to Jeremy Tyler, a 17-year-old standout from San Diego. Tyler, though, is not just skipping college but also his senior year of high school.

The reason behind the pioneering moves made by Jennings and Tyler? The NBA’s 2005 collective bargaining agreement, which required that beginning with the 2006 draft all American players be at least 19 and a year removed from high school.

“In the easiest way to describe it, it was unfair. It wasn’t right because a precedent had been set very successfully in kids who do this,” says Vaccaro. “They don’t have the right to discriminate against your ability to earn a living. I just don’t believe that. Nobody. In any part of society.”

The precedent Vaccaro’s referring to is a 10-year period from 1995-2005 which saw many of the best high school players bypass college for the NBA. In total, 39 preps were drafted in that span, including stars such as Bryant, James, McGrady, Kevin Garnett, Dwight Howard, Al Jefferson, Rashard Lewis, Jermaine O’Neal, and Amare Stoudemire.

Making his case

Vaccaro has his own theories as to why the NBA would enforce an age limit.

“I think the most important reason they did it was that David [Stern], the NBA, can save on the contracts. If you make it 18-plus-one, or any discriminatory age, you automatically delay the future contracts by two or three years,” says Vaccaro. “It’s the third contract that’s the $100 million contract, it’s not the first rookie-based contract. There’s only four years guaranteed and two of them are team options. It’s the delaying the paying of the money, and David Stern and the NBA and the players’ association realize that they can delay the entry level of these kids.”

Vaccaro thinks the change is squarely about the money. He points out that NBA teams can save by holding on to veteran players at mid-level, or even minimum-level salaries, rather than having to open up their wallets for talented younger players.

Vaccaro also bristles at the notion that high school players aren’t ready for the grind of the NBA. To prove his case, he refers to the Cavaliers, Lakers, Magic and Nuggets – the final four teams (hypothetically, the four best teams) in this year’s NBA playoffs. Cleveland’s James, Denver’s J.R. Smith, Los Angeles’ Bryant and Andrew Bynum, and Orlando’s Howard and Lewis – all key contributors to their teams – made the jump from high school.

“Six of the key players, six of them. And they’re not just players,” says Vaccaro excitedly. “So how do you in good faith argue the point that they weren’t ready?”

Sonny Vaccaro signed Michael Jordan to his first shoe deal.

Sonny Vaccaro signed Michael Jordan to his first shoe deal.

If only it were that easy. For all the success stories, there have also been some colossal failures. Names like Jonathan Bender, Darius Miles, Kwame Brown, DeSagana Diop, Shaun Livingston, Robert Swift, and Martell Webster were all lottery picks that haven’t worked out. Others such as Korleone Young, Leon Smith, Ousmane Cisse, Ndudi Ebi, and James Lang barely even broke a sweat in the NBA or saw trouble off the court.

Still, Vaccaro thinks the blame should not rest on the players, successful or otherwise.

“If the professional bodies, the pro teams themselves, don’t think these kids can do it, don’t draft them. Don’t employ them! The thing that’s missing, and even to the public, is the very people who don’t want them to come play in their league, are the very people that draft them,” says Vaccaro.

Responding to criticism

In a May 12 USA Today story, Wally Renfro, an NCAA vice president and senior adviser to NCAA President Myles Brand, spoke negatively of Vaccaro.

“He helped create an environment in which the value of high school and college education has been diminished in the minds of many young basketball players,” Renfro told the newspaper.

When asked about Renfro’s comment, Vaccaro claimed a double standard.

“Wally Renfro’s group [the NCAA] took more money from shoe companies than any other organization in the history of corporate sponsorships. … If he thinks I did these things, then why did he not think I did these things in 1978 when we signed our first colleges?”

Indeed, Vaccaro was the first person to pay college basketball coaches for exclusive apparel deals. He later orchestrated similar agreements with the schools.

“So Wally’s blaming me, and I accept … I publicized and marketed the kids, I accept that. But I also want him to say in the same breathe, ‘Thank you Mr. Vaccaro and Nike for publicizing and marketing Maryland and Georgetown and North Carolina,’” says Vaccaro. “They all sell our products. We’re on their bookshelves, in their bookstores. They let me in the door! No matter who wants to say I demonized or didn’t demonize, it all got its start 30 years ago when they [the NCAA] took the money.”

The future

Vaccaro believes that the NBA will eventually lift the age requirement. If — as Jennings and Tyler have done — more players decide to play in Europe before gaining eligibility, Vaccaro thinks the league will have to react and come up with a resolution to its collective bargaining agreement.

“What Jeremy Tyler did is open the door to a wider spectrum of people. You know, now you’ve got 17-year-old kids who want to do it,” says Vaccaro.

The easy money is certainly hard to argue against. According to Vaccaro, Jennings made over $1 million in salary and endorsements during his one season playing in Italy. That is money “very hard for normal people with college educations to achieve with their degrees,” says Vaccaro.

The alternative is to go to college and become a ‘one-and-done’ player, or one that leaves for the NBA right after becoming eligible. There are a growing number of ‘one-and-done’ players and the ramifications of the NBA’s 2005 rule change are slowly becoming evident. Young NBA stars such as O.J. Mayo and Derrick Rose have been in the news recently for investigations of NCAA rule violations that have been black eyes for the basketball programs at Southern California and Memphis.

Vaccaro makes it very clear that he is not against youngsters getting their educations. For most of his clients, going to college to forward their basketball careers is the right decision. Only a very selective group of high school players is physically capable and talented enough to make the jump to the NBA. For the few preps that fit that description and come from humble means, the choice between going to college or turning pro is often very clear.

“How do they [critics] beat me up? How do they beat this whole system up? When someone can take themselves off of welfare basically and have money in the bank,” says Vaccaro. “Isn’t it interesting? These kids are doing it the right way; they’re trying to make a living with their talent. We’re talking about people capable of earning money legally — without resorting to any criminal activity!”