Walter Luckett, 2nd round, 27th overall.
How did that work out coming out early? Sure he had a knee issue. Flash may wanna comment on those times.
If JP doesn't come back, as much as I want him to succeed, I put him overseas in 2-3 years.
Someone called for Flash? Is that like calling for Batman? The Walter Luckett situation was very different than the situation that Jason Preston is confronted with. For starters, Walter was a two-time MAC Player of the Year, who averaged 25 his junior season. He was about as good as he was gonna get in college. His strengths were his strengths and his weaknesses probably were gonna remain his weaknesses. Here's what he had to take into consideration: Coach Jim Snyder had retired; highly-recruited freshmen Ulice Payne and Larry Slappy had transferred the season before; all-MAC-caliber players Bill Brown and George Green had played their senior season.
The prospects for the next season weren't promising. There was a good chance that opponents would be able to gang up on Walter and his play could suffer. I thought he should leave.
What happened with the Pistons is another story for another time. Wrong team, wrong situation--especially after they traded for veteran guards Archie Clark and Kevin Porter.
As for Jason Preston, I'm under the firm belief that you judge a situation by how much interest the other party shows in you. For instance, do you think Ben-Rod would be a Bobcat if Ohio State and Xavier had made him a recruiting priority? Who showed him the love? Ohio and coach Boals.
Only half of the first-round NBA draftees will be on an NBA roster after three seasons. It's extremely hard to play and stay in the league. Consider this: If I ask you to name MAC players in the NFL, you probably can name 10 without thinking. Can you name five MAC players currently in the NBA?
The bottom line is if the NBA really likes you, really wants you, they'll show you the love--and then the money--by making you one of 30 first-round draft picks. If you don't think Jason is worthy of a pick like that, what you're really saying is he's not ready for the league. That's not a crime. He has another year available to hone his skills, get bigger and stronger, increase his draft position, and have a heck of a lot of fun helping the Bobcats make a run at greatness this coming season.