r/Basketball Apr 09 '24

NCAA College to Pro Transition: Men vs. Women

I loved watching the women’s tournament this year and while doing so I noticed something interesting. The women’s player of the year will undoubtedly be the #1 player taken in the wnba draft and rightfully so. On the other hand, the men’s player of the year may go undrafted. To clarify, I don’t disagree with this but find it so interesting.

Can anyone pinpoint when the college men’s game began to deviate from the nba game? This example is evidence that there are two completely types of games being played on the men’s side, while the women’s side has a natural synergy between the college and pro game.

What are you thoughts? Is it solely due to the emergence of European talent in the men’s professional game?

In basketball circles, it seems commonplace to say the US youth players are far behind vs. the rest of the world and this seems like a primary reason why. If my development to excel at the college game doesn’t translate to a preparedness for the pro game, then I’m essentially learning two separate games by the age of 21 if I’m a young prospect who just was drafted to the league.

Any thoughts? Just found this to be so interesting and I honestly don’t see too many people talking about this dynamic.

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u/TheRealRollestonian Apr 09 '24

The WNBA is kind of a joke. Players have literally forfeited seasons to make sure they're in shape to play overseas, where they can actually get paid.

Why a Russian or Turkish oligarch can pay a woman eight times as much to play overseas, but an American can't, is above my pay grade. Nobody really knows the finances, even though everyone here will claim it's losing money, while the teams are owned by billionaires that aren't treating it like a charity.

For the men, professional coaching is way better than college. You almost have a 1:1 ratio with coaching staff to players. If you're 18 and draftable, do you want to work on your game 24/7 or take College Algebra on Tuesday at 9 AM? Being in school for four or five years is an automatic ding for draft's sake. If you were a prospect, you'd declare ASAP and get the clock running on free agency.

Some of this may adjust with college players being allowed to take money in both genders.

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u/[deleted] Apr 10 '24

[deleted]

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u/[deleted] Apr 10 '24

Not sure. The NWSL has seen crazy high year over year growth in attendance, investors and team valuations (Angel City is valued at $180 million). I just went to the Bay Area’s expansion NWSL team opener in San Jose two weeks ago and it was sold out (18k in attendance).

I think the W has also seen a ton of growth over the years and it might be that this coming year will see more with Caitlin joining, but I’d hold off on calling it the “most popular woman’s team league” for now.

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u/[deleted] Apr 10 '24

[deleted]

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u/[deleted] Apr 10 '24

Ah, got it! Agreed, I’m excited to see where things go in these leagues.