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Abdul-Jabbar says NBA entry age should be 21

OMAHA, Neb. (AP)—Kareem Abdul-Jabbar says the NBA should raise its minimum age
for entry into the league to 21.

The NBA’s career scoring leader and center on the Los Angeles Lakers’ 1980s
“Showtime” teams said Wednesday there’s a disturbing sense of
entitlement
among many of today’s young pros.

“They get precocious kids from high school who think they’re rock stars—
‘Where’s my $30 million?’ ” said Abdul-Jabbar, who was in Omaha to speak
at the
B’nai B’rith sports banquet.. “The attitudes have changed, and the game
has
suffered because of that, and it has certainly hurt the college game.”

The 63-year-old Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson led the Lakers to five NBA
titles in the 1980s. Before Abdul-Jabbar retired in 1989, he set the NBA
record
for career points (38,387), MVP selections (six) and All-Star selections
(19).

He now is a special assistant to the Lakers and a best-selling author.

Abdul-Jabbar met students Wednesday at Boys Town, the nationally acclaimed
home for troubled youth. He told them about his time at UCLA, where he
played on
three national championship teams for John Wooden and graduated in four
years
with degrees in English and history.

“Coach John Wooden encouraged me to be more than just a jock,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “He said if I let my intellectual life suffer because
I was
so into being an athlete that I would be less than I could be. I would
tell all
students to pursue your dreams but don’t let your education suffer.”

The NBA in 2005 changed its entry age to 19. Players who previously might
have jumped from high school to the NBA now end up playing one year of
college
ball before declaring for the draft.

Those players are still too young, Abdul-Jabbar said, and many deprive
themselves of the emotional and physical maturity necessary to meet on-
and
off-the-court challenges.

“When I played, the players had to go to college and earn their way onto
the court, meaning that there were upperclassmen ahead of them,” he
said.
“Players who had to go through that and had to go to class, when they
got to be
professional athletes, they were a lot better qualified.”

Abdul-Jabbar said if college weren’t the right place for a player, the
player should, as an alternative, be required to play in a minor league
or
developmental league.

Kevin Garnett,
Kobe
Bryant
and LeBron
James
became stars right out of high
school. The day after James all but disappeared in Cleveland’s playoff
loss to
Boston, Abdul-Jabbar said even “King James” would have benefited from
college.

“He would have come into the professional ranks very polished, given his
innate gifts,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “Having to go through a college system
would
have made him a total gem as soon as he stepped out of the college
ranks.”

Abdul-Jabbar commented on other topics:

— He said his role as co-pilot “Roger Murdock” in the 1980 comedy movie
“Airplane” changed his life.

“I think everybody in the airline industry is required to watch it,” he
said. “When I get on planes, every so often the stewardess or the pilot
will
come out and ask me, ‘Do you want to fly the plane?’ “

During a flight in Europe, a pilot escorted him from his seat to the cockpit
for takeoff.

“I get a good laugh from it,” he said. “It’s been over 25 years since I
made that movie and people still watch it all the time. I guess it’s a
classic.”

— He said he has known about Boys Town and its founder, the Rev. Edward
Flanagan, since he attended Catholic school in an Irish neighborhood in
New York
City. “The Irish were very proud of him and what he had achieved. It’s
really
neat for me to come out here and see it in reality and seeing they’re
doing such
fine work. That is so necessary. People have to care about our youth.
They are
our most precious resources. If we don’t care, what’s going to happen.”

— He said his greatest athletic achievement was playing on the Lakers team
that beat Boston for the NBA title in 1985.

“But seeing my kids graduate from college and knowing they have a firm
basis in life, that is a lot more important to me, personally,” he said.

— He said 6-11 center Nate Thurmond, who played for Golden State, Chicago
and Cleveland, was his toughest matchup.

“A lot of guys beat on me and said they played good defense. Nate actually
used skill and knowledge of the game to play against me and make my
evenings
more difficult when I had to play him,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “He was
everything
a professional center should be.”

— He said the “Showtime” Lakers would fare well in the current NBA.

“We had guys on the bench who were Hall-of-Famers,” he said. “That doesn’t happen now because there is such a dispersal of talent. We would
do very
well in this present climate.”