Every year the top high school basketball recruits get hyped up. How often do they panout?
ByRussell Samora & Amber Thomas
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Remember NBA great Donnell Harvey? Neither do we. Despite being the #1 high school recruit in2000âsomething that you think would indicate future NBA stardomâhe put together a meager careerin the league, averaging around 5 points per game over 5 years. On the flip side is LeBron Jamesâthe#1 high school recruit just a few years laterâand we all know what heâs been up to.
This disparity got us thinking, are these top 100 recruit lists any indication of making it to theNBA, let alone becoming a star?
It must be really hard to assess top talent when the pool is so large in high school. Now that weâveentered the YouTube era, hype surrounding players can inflate in an instant. Sure, LeBron paved the way withsome nationally televised games, but now millions of people are watching ZionWilliamson throw down dunks in warm ups, or Lamelo Ball hit threesfrom half court in eight grade.
Letâs take a look at just how far the high school stars of the past 20 years made it in their basketballcareers.
Below, each circle is a player that ranked amongst the top 100 high school recruits in the US according tothe Recruiting Services Consensus Index.
27% of the 1,563 top-ranked high school players made it to the NBA and only 25% made it past their two-yearrookie contract. Put another way, 441 of the 900 draft picks in that 15 year span were top 100 recruits. Just31 players eventually reached âsuperstarâ status (based on advanced statistics, details at the bottom).
But perhaps the top 100 is too broad of a categorization. Surely the top 10 players will make it to the NBAmore often, right?
Players ranked in the top 10 certainly appear to have slightly better oddsâa full 84% of themeventually made it to the NBA. Though with 60 draft picks a year, you might expect that number to be higher.
In the late 1990âs and early 2000âs, teams could bet hard enough on a playerâs future success that they coulddraft them straight out of high school. This ended in 2006 when a rule was put into place, declaring that players had to be at least 19 years old or one year removedfrom high school before getting drafted. But talks are escalating about reversing this rule, especially in light of the âshoe incidentâ. Letâs look at thesuccess of the straight-to-NBA high school players.
Opponents of removing the age limit often cite players like Korleone Young as reasons to keep it in place.Young, the #3 ranked high school player in 1998, ultimately fizzled out of the NBA having played only 15 minutes across 3games. However, he appears to be the exception more than the rule. Of the other 34 players drafted straightout of high school, 94% made it past their rookie contract, with 55% eventually becoming mediocre or betterNBA players.
Letâs switch our view once more, away from the highest ranking high school players to those that played in aUS high school, but did not appear on the top 100 list. We found 338 of these players that were eventuallydrafted into the NBA, despite being undervalued in high school. Letâs compare their career paths with ourhighly-ranked and drafted high schoolers.
Even when we limit the top ranked players to just those that were eventually drafted, the success rate ofplayers ranked in high school is notably higher than for those who werenât. Where 92% of the drafted andranked players made it past their rookie contract, only 73% of the unranked and drafted players stayed morethan two years. Seven playersâDwyane Wade, Marc Gasol, Paul George, Jimmy Butler,Russell Westbrook,Stephen Curry, and Damian Lillardâwhose high school careers were apparently not worthy of a spot amongstthe top 100, still broke into the ranks of superstars in their NBA careers.
Letâs look at one more slice that has lofty expectations; The Big 4. Kentucky, Kansas, Duke, and UNC areknown to consistently land the biggest recruits. Do these recruits translate into NBA success stories or iscollege their last stop?
The college funnel is an interesting discussion, especially when it surrounds the lack of pay for NCAAstudent athletes. Below we widen the field to take a look at the biggest NBA-producing colleges and see howmany yield NBA talent.