Would Mike have made the Majors before now? Would he have been tough enough and worldly enough out of high school to survive? I find this argument that whether he was in the minors making a little bit of money and gaining some sort of "seniority," or growing up and maturing in college,that they both lead to the exact same place, it's a highly questionable argument. Are there statistics that track the eventual success of players who sign out of high school and those who are drafted but instead chose to go to college?
I spoke with Jim Thomas a couple of weeks ago and asked if could remember any WSU recruits who had signed out of high school going on to the majors, and he could remember only one. Maybe there are others and he just couldn't remember them, or maybe it's just a heck of a lot harder road.
Something else he said was he didn't know of a single one of those players, who signed out of high school, going on and getting a college degree. Again, there could be some he just didn't know about.
I wonder how many of those young men would say, 3 years later, that they made the right decision? Vs. those who went to college? Maybe it's a higher percentage than I imagine - I have no data. Let's take the example of a kid who takes that $300K out of high school and then is out looking for a job two years later? What did he end up with? Maybe a car? Taxes took a bunch of the $300K and then he spent some more of it to LIVE ON the next two years because a minor league salary hardly pays enough to eat. Maybe he walks away with $50K, he has only a high school education, he's 21 years old, and what are his prospects? I just think it's a HUGE gamble. What percentage of kids drafted out of high school are still playing professional baseball 5 years later? Even 3 years later?
I spoke with Jim Thomas a couple of weeks ago and asked if could remember any WSU recruits who had signed out of high school going on to the majors, and he could remember only one. Maybe there are others and he just couldn't remember them, or maybe it's just a heck of a lot harder road.
Something else he said was he didn't know of a single one of those players, who signed out of high school, going on and getting a college degree. Again, there could be some he just didn't know about.
I wonder how many of those young men would say, 3 years later, that they made the right decision? Vs. those who went to college? Maybe it's a higher percentage than I imagine - I have no data. Let's take the example of a kid who takes that $300K out of high school and then is out looking for a job two years later? What did he end up with? Maybe a car? Taxes took a bunch of the $300K and then he spent some more of it to LIVE ON the next two years because a minor league salary hardly pays enough to eat. Maybe he walks away with $50K, he has only a high school education, he's 21 years old, and what are his prospects? I just think it's a HUGE gamble. What percentage of kids drafted out of high school are still playing professional baseball 5 years later? Even 3 years later?
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