^ I think the guys who are supposed to go generally go.
Grayson Allen was really never a guy who was supposed to go. He could have gone, but that's a different thing. There were questions about whether he was even a first-rounder. The media went into this tizzy yesterday--"I can't believe Allen's coming back!"--as if he were a lottery pick. He wasn't. I have doubts that he'll ever play in the NBA.
Almost always, at Duke or UK or anywhere else, if they're projected in the lottery, they jump.
But the main thing about UK is Calipari. The whole backbone of his recruiting is the NBA. It's why these guys come here. It's what he sells the program on. So it makes sense that the first chance they get to go, they do. It's far more surprising when they don't.
Grayson Allen was really never a guy who was supposed to go. He could have gone, but that's a different thing. There were questions about whether he was even a first-rounder. The media went into this tizzy yesterday--"I can't believe Allen's coming back!"--as if he were a lottery pick. He wasn't. I have doubts that he'll ever play in the NBA.
Almost always, at Duke or UK or anywhere else, if they're projected in the lottery, they jump.
But the main thing about UK is Calipari. The whole backbone of his recruiting is the NBA. It's why these guys come here. It's what he sells the program on. So it makes sense that the first chance they get to go, they do. It's far more surprising when they don't.
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