Bruised Egos: Nine Consensus All-Americans Go Undrafted in Last Six Years
Boasting fewer (NBA) assets than a MBA views Greece's shaky economy, what were they thinking? The misguided must not have taken an independent-study college course in deductive reasoning at their power conference school. Undergraduates Cliff Alexander (Kansas), Brandon Ashley (Arizona), Michael Frazier (Florida), Aaron Harrison (Kentucky), Trevor Lacey (North Carolina State), Terran Petteway (Nebraska), Robert Upshaw (Washington) and Chris Walker (Florida) - several of them potential All-Americans if they returned to college - were not among the chosen few in this year's NBA draft. Of course, the NBA is a difficult nut to crack. Even if they became All-Americans, there were no guarantees any of them would be selected in 2016. But now they're taking a crash-to-earth course at the school of hard knocks.
Northern Iowa's Seth Tuttle became the ninth NCAA consensus All-American to go undrafted in the last six seasons. Do you need any more evidence that the quality of play at the collegiate level has diminished in recent years? The NBA draft was reduced to seven rounds in 1985, three rounds in 1988 and to its present two rounds in 1989. Centers Bill Spivey of Kentucky and Sherman White of LIU, All-Americans in the early 1950s, went undrafted by the NBA allegedly because of possible repercussions stemming from a game-fixing scandal. A total of 26 All-Americans, including five in 2011, have gone undrafted by the NBA thus far in the 21st Century.
Five years ago, Sherron Collins (Kansas) and Scottie Reynolds (Villanova) became the initial NCAA consensus first-team All-Americans not to be selected in the NBA draft. Following is an alphabetical list of All-Americans who weren't selected in the NBA draft:
*NCAA consensus first-team All-American.
**NCAA consensus second-team All-American.
NOTE: Bell, Booker, Collins, Hansbrough, Haslem, Jennings, Jones, Lucas, McNeal, Ray, Sanchez and Smith went on to play in the NBA after signing as free agents. Pratt played in the ABA.