Contrary to published report, Greg Oden has not yet decided his basketball future. This according to Mike Conley Sr., one day after Greg Oden Sr. said his son was leaving Ohio State for the NBA. Conley Sr., who is expected to be Oden’s agent whenever his professional career begins, said Oden has not committed to turning pro just yet.

"No. Definitely not. Not to say he's not going to decide that -- but, 100 percent, as of this moment, he hasn't decided," Conley, father of Oden's high school and college teammate, Mike Conley Jr., told The Associated Press.

"I talk to his mother every day, and I talk to [Ohio State coach] Thad Matta every day, and if Thad Matta and his mother and I don't know, then how can anyone else know?"

The news that Oden may not leave Columbus after just one year will surprise a lot of people, but I’ve figured all along that Oden would return to Ohio State for his sophomore season. Oden just seems like a different kind of cat; he’s unbelievably humble and said earlier this season that he feels he still needs to work on his game at the college level. He even told ESPN’s Andy Katz that after he found out he needed surgery on his right wrist, he asked Ohio State coach Thad Matta if he could redshirt. If anyone else of Oden’s stature said that, it would be assumed they were joking, but I’m not sure if Greg Oden knows how to be funny. He will almost certainly be the #1 pick whenever he comes out, so Oden may not feel the pressure most college ballers do to make their millions right away.

And if Oden doesn’t come out, that would beg the question, just how good is this incoming draft class? For a year people have been saying how this is one of the most stacked classes in NBA history with two guaranteed blue chippers at the top (Oden and Durant), and a slew of other freshman (not to mention Florida’s trio of juniors) who were barred from entering the NBA out of high school because of a new rule passed by David Stern. If Oden goes back to school, Durant is the for-sure number one pick, but who would go after him? Guys like Al Horford, Brendan Wright, and Corey Brewer are all considered possible top 5 picks, but now one of those guys has to go #2 to an NBA team pissed off they didn’t land Oden or Durant.

For my money, I think Oden would be dumb not to go pro. Another year in college won’t fix any of his flaws because he dominates college ball already. He won’t need to work on his footwork and post moves because in college he can get by on his pure size and strength, something that won’t work for him in the NBA. But I’d love to see Oden go back to school just see the looks on the faces of all the NBA GM’s that instructed their teams to tank during the last two months of the NBA season. All that losing for nothing. Take that Milwaukee.






Comments

[April 15, 2007 10:26 PM]  |  link  |  reply
stopmikelupica said

You make a good argument for why Oden might stay in school. Since, as a Knicks fan, it doesn't matter, I hope he does stay in school, for the same reason as you - because I hate teams that tank games. The Celtics deserve as much ire as the Bucks. Since both of them are in the the top-3, I hope Oden stays, and Durant goes to Memphis at #1, and the tanking turns out to be all just for Noah (the rich man's Balkman). It'll also be good if Oden staying = Mike Conley Jr. also staying in school for another year (another lottery pick less for the Celts/Bucks).

Or, conversely, if Oden does come out, I hope the 76ers somehow get the #1, and the Grizzlies the #2.

[April 15, 2007 11:36 PM]  |  link  |  reply
Rickhouse said

I'm pulling for the sixers in the lottery, behind my bulls. They easily could have started tanking but igoudala just started going nuts and kinda fucked the whole sitution up. Just for that id like to see them get a top 2 pick.

And im assuming you got the Noah/richman's renaldo balkman comparison from Bill Simmons, i saw that too. I know balkman is kinda good but isn't he only like 6'6? Noah is almost 7 foot, so im not sure how good that comparison is. I guess i would compare Noah to Tyson chandler (who's actually real good), but a little better offensively.

[April 16, 2007 1:41 AM]  |  link  |  reply
mike said

you're the man rickhouse

[April 16, 2007 11:13 AM]  |  link  |  reply
stopmikelupica said

Yeah, I meant to put quotes on "the rich man's Balkman" - it is the Simmons comparison. It's only accurate in that when they were both in the SEC, Balkman always played well against Florida and Noah. And somehow found a way to get his, um, Gamecocks to beat the Gators.

The Chandler comparison is good, but Noah is more advanced offensively, and not as good defensively yet (Chandler is a legit defensive player of the year this season). Plus Noah can hit a FT. So it's hard to properly figure out Noah's potential in the NBA. I think he'll be a good solid player, but he won't justify his high pick, either. Because if he goes 3, 4, or even 5, at least two to three far better players (future All-Stars) will have gone after him. Noah should be drafted in the 8-12 range for him to be properly valued.




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