Youth knocks at NFL's door
Plenty of teenagers have gone straight from high school into various
professional sports careers. The exception: football.
By Erik Spanberg | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
At 19, LeBron James became the National Basketball Association's rookie of
the year this week after averaging 21 points per game and leading the
once-moribund Cleveland Cavaliers to within one game of a playoff berth.
Mr. James, a multimillionaire many times over, skipped college and went
straight to the pros after a stellar high school career in Ohio. It took him
little time to adjust to the rigors of an 82-game pro schedule and the
challenges of balancing stardom, constant travel, and newfound wealth. He
torched grizzled veterans and young stars alike with nary a misstep
throughout the season.
With two college stars seeking early entry into the National Football League
draft this weekend, the possibility of high school players making a similar
leap in the football world came into sharper focus. A range of experts, as
well as the NFL and its players union, view such a scenario as heresy.
"I don't think there's any question that they would have big-time problems,"
says Dr. Doug McKeag, director of the Center for Sports Medicine at Indiana
University in Indianapolis. "And I don't think the NFL will ever allow it,
regardless of who wants to do it."
Dr. McKeag says football's brutality requires excessive strength, even more
so than other sports. He concedes that a handful of high school stars might
possess the physical attributes needed to play professional football, but
even those rare talents would suffer under the game's crushing psychological
burden.
His overwhelming concern focuses on the cutthroat culture of pro football.
Unlike other sports leagues, he says, the environment of an NFL locker room
requires maturity and mental toughness beyond what any teenager possesses.
Lawyers differ on whether prep stars will eventually gain entry into the NFL
draft. Critics of the current policy ask how any league can prohibit a
player's earning power with arbitrary rules. Similar legal battles in other
sports have been won by players challenging the system. But since 1993, the
NFL has required players to be three years removed from their final high
school season before turning pro.
Two former college players, Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett and Southern
California receiver Mike Williams, are challenging that rule. On Monday, a
federal appeals court ruled against them. They now await word from the
United States Supreme Court on whether they will be eligible for this
weekend's draft.
Eligibility rules in other sports are far less stringent. Teenagers
routinely compete at the highest levels of tennis, basketball, and hockey.
James, for example, is only the latest in a long line of prep stars making
the leap into the NBA. Others include All-Stars Kobe Bryant and Kevin
Garnett. Carmelo Anthony, the runner-up in this year's rookie-of-the-year
vote, spent just one season at Syracuse University before turning pro.
In baseball, drafting teenagers before they've seen a college campus is
routine. Not so in football, where, critics charge, a cartel between
colleges and the NFL keeps players from having any leverage until they've
spent three years toiling on Saturdays instead of Sundays.
Jack Butler, the president at Blesto Inc., a football scouting service in
Pittsburgh, has been assessing player talent for more than 40 years. His
firm serves as a consultant to 11 NFL teams.
The punishing demands of pro football, he says, would crush most 17- and
18-year-olds. In addition, Mr. Butler says temptations to try their luck in
the draft would cost many young players a chance to go to college and
develop career alternatives if football doesn't pan out."It's just a bad
idea all the way around," he says. "Those boys aren't ready for the pro
game. And what happens if they don't make it?"
Others point to the opinion of Gene Upshaw, the top executive at the NFL
Players Association. Mr. Upshaw, a Hall of Fame offensive lineman during his
playing career with the Oakland Raiders, has, along with the union, been
steadfast in supporting the league's position.
"I think Gene is very sincere in this," says Gary Roberts, director of the
sports law program at Tulane University. "He's not just going along with
what [NFL Commissioner] Paul Tagliabue says. He really believes kids should
not be out there on an NFL field. Coming from a guy who played the game at
its highest levels, that means something."
Mr. Roberts believes the league will prevail in its campaign to keep younger
players out of the draft. He cites the inclusion of draft requirements in
the NFL collective bargaining agreement as a strong precedent for future
legal rulings to keep the current system intact.
Many observers come back to football's physical demands. Even compared with
the rough-and-tumble world of hockey, they say, pro football requires more
raw strength and brute force.
McKeag points to many of the college players eligible for this weekend's
seven-round NFL draft. Many of those players, he says, have been transformed
through several years of college football and attendant off-season weight
and conditioning programs.
A typical example: Robert Gallery, the Iowa offensive lineman pegged as the
best in this draft. He arrived at Iowa as a 6-ft., 7 in., 240-pound tight
end. By the end of his college career, Mr. Gallery weighed 323 pounds and
transformed into a monster lineman.
"Look at the differences between a freshman football player and a senior,"
McKeag says. "It's amazing."
Beyond physical maturity, experts say allowing high school stars into the
NFL draft would only exacerbate the problem of young players prematurely
setting their sights on big-time sports careers.
Roberts, the Tulane law professor, says one benefit for colleges would be
the presence on campus of fewer athletes who are there only to further their
professional prospects.
"It would make it more about true students," he says. "From the players'
perspectives, though, they're better off with the way it is now."
Something few consider is the mental demand of playing in the NFL, says
Randy Cross, a CBS broadcaster who spent 13 years in the league. Few high
school players have to memorize revamped playbooks once a season, much less
on a weekly basis, he says.
Beyond that, 18-year-olds can't knock heads with players five and 10 years
older for a sustained period of time. The NFL season is far longer and more
grueling than both college and high school schedules.
Most of all, Mr. Cross fears a surfeit of has-beens in their early 20s.
Bounced out of the game (the average NFL career spans three to four years),
or worse, and with only a high school diploma in hand, what will they do
next?
"This may sound harsh," he says. "But I think McDonald's has enough people
to work at their counter already."



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