Georgia Tech Duo Feeling the Draft

Discussion in 'NBA Draft' started by Shapecity, Mar 20, 2007.

  1. Shapecity

    Shapecity S2/JBB Teamster Staff Member Administrator

    Joined:
    Jan 30, 2003
    Messages:
    45,018
    Likes Received:
    57
    Trophy Points:
    48
    <div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">To go or not to go. That is the question foremost on the minds of Georgia Tech's basketball fans.

    Most think they know the answer as it pertains to Thaddeus Young and Javaris Crittenton.

    Young is gone, popular opinion says, because he wouldn't have bothered with college in the first place if not for the NBA outlawing high school players from its draft a year ago.

    And Crittenton, folks guess, is staying because, well, he's a point guard, and even the phenoms at that position over the years - Chris Paul, Jason Kidd, Isiah Thomas, Magic Johnson - spent at least two seasons in college.

    Word around the Georgia Tech locker room is both are staying. They enjoy the college experience, and both are fierce enough competitors they won't want to leave the program after what they consider a season of underachievement.

    Plus, with all but one regular coming back, the expected return of starting shooting guard Lewis Clinch from his academic suspension, and the addition of the next freshman phenom, Gani Lawal, the Jackets should contend for an Atlantic Coast Conference title, if not more, next winter.

    Young stated his plan to come back - and he did so emphatically - after the Jackets' NCAA Tournament loss to UNLV on Friday.

    Coach Paul Hewitt encouraged him not to commit one way or the other until after it's determined just how high he'd go in the draft if he did leave.

    Hewitt remembers when Chris Bosh and his mother came to him in 2003 and told the coach Bosh wanted to stay. Nothing would make a coach happier, Hewitt told them, but wait and see. The top-five picks in the draft get top dollar, and another year of college won't make a financial difference.

    Bosh went fourth overall to Toronto and is now an all-star.

    Young is NBA ready. But if he's projected as a late lottery pick - eighth to 13th pick overall - he could move up into Bosh territory with another year of seasoning. </div>

    Source
     

Share This Page