IMO college basketball gives you the spotlight but I dont always see the coalition that going or staying in college basketball makes you a better pro player ...
You are absolutely right. It is a fallacy. In fact there has been a study done on it and there is no overall correlation. People act like there aren't coaches available in the NBA to help a player improve his jumpshot or there aren't weight rooms available in NBA practice facilities to make a player stronger.
Completely agree with both of you. Think of it this way -- is an athlete going to improve more in an "amateur" setting; where he's limited to 2 hours of practice per day, can't see his coaches all summer, and has to also attend school in the process? Or will he see better coaching/instruction when his only job is basketball? It's the latter no question. But the amount of guaranteed money is a serious factor, and if it's not there I would advise Moe to return.
1) guaranteed money is a big factor
2) bigger exposure helps to give free marketing to a player which can lead to better draft positioning
3) players get a LOT more training and fundamentals improvement than you realize in college
4). Most that are successful leaving early or skipping all together are sooo über-talented that they succeed regardless.
I personally believe that the preparation college ball provides is underrated. I think that even Michael Jordan would tell you that. Tons of guys go on to good pro careers only because of what college had to offer. How many looks was Jameer Nelson going to get if he didn't go to college? How much better would Mo Harkless have been had he skipped college and gone to the NBDL and does anybody think he'd really have been talked about this much had he done so? I could go on and on, but the benefits of attending and staying in college at least 2 years IMO are too numerous to ignore. Most kids would not develop skipping college all together and riding some pine in a developmental league somewhere.
In Moe's case, he did himself a huge service by attending SJU this season. He certainly wouldn't be making a bad decision fine leaves this year. I think he'd be making a much better decision for logistical purposes. If he leaves after one more season, he can erase any doubts and work his way from bottom of the first/beginning of second round into lottery if he does I believe. Especially if he's as good as I thnk he can be. Riding the pine in the NBA is a lot more fun with lottery-pick money.