Phillybul wrote:
The consideration for a players HS career is incredibly small. It doesn’t make or break a players induction at all. Probably just an “oh btw he did x y and z in HS”. I think at that point their minds if that player is a HOF or not are already made up. I’m not even sure it’s even in their writeup for the HOF. The meat and potatoes is the nba career and then college/international follows suit. HS resumes are just for diehard fans of that player. Or fans just intrigued by a players entire body of work.
The point is, if you combine Boozer's high school career and his college career, he's one of the best American prospects of all time.
The sentiment of "We are talking about high school" in relation to Kareem and Boozer is ridiculous because Kareem only played in college because he was forced. The only reason he stayed in college so long was because freshmen couldn't play varsity.
If Kareem was around today, he would've been one and done.
Most of these long ass college careers back then was because players like Kareem had no choice.
Kareem was the best prospect since Wilt Chamberlain and Wilt quit college to play with the Globetrotters to make money.
Nobody cares about college basketball. I am sure if Boozer played 10 years in the NBA at just an All-Star level with him putting up a ridiculous college season and being a GOAT American High School prospect, he's getting into the HOF.
The HOF isn't that hard to get into, someone like Demar Derozan is getting in and he has never been the GOAT level on any level.