Nuntius wrote:UcanUwill wrote:Nuntius wrote:
Lorenzo Brown is still an outlier. Ibaka moved to Spain when he was 17/18 and he played for Spanish teams before getting drafted. Mirotić moved to Spain when he was 14 and he played there before getting drafted as well. Oleson has spent 14 years, almost his whole career, playing for Spanish clubs. All 3 of them had some kind of relationship with the country. Lorenzo Brown has none.
Yes, I agree, not every naturalized player is the same, but I still dont like it. Honestly, I do swallow Mirotic and Ibaka naturalization more comfortably, not because they lived in Spain, it is just these could have easily played for their real nation, but if they really prefer to play for another country, ok, thats interesting. I say this, cause most naturalized players are American and you cant say the same thing about them. Most of these guys get hired, because they would never have a shot at playing for team USA. If Lorenzo Brown had a real choice, he would not choose Spain is what I am saying.
Yeah, I hear you. As I said before, I have no issue if the naturalized player has played in that country's league for a significant period of time. But when it comes to players who have never played in that country then, well, even I consider it problematic
I used to completely agree with this (kinda still do in theory), but I've come to realize in practice it doesn't really work. How many parents (or grandparents) need to be from the country in question to make it ok? How many years of play in the local country would make a player elegible? Plus, that in itself favors strong basketball leagues/countries like Spain, Greece, Turkey... which attract and develop foreign players in the first place.
In the end, the system in place now is fair to everyone, in my opinion. You get one naturalized player per team, and players can't switch countries once they play for one.
Look at small countries like Montenegro, which played Spain today. Population of 600,000. Spain has 10 cities with a bigger population than that! Obviously they will take advantage and use a naturalized player.
Take Doncic as an example. Slovenia (nationality, but no professional playing time), Spain (professional) and Serbia (his father is half Serbian) all wanted him on their team. Let the guy choose (and the teams the one player) and that's it.
It elevates the game in the end, and makes it more competitive. It gives players a chance to prove themselves on the world stage that they otherwise would not have (with their home country's team).