SAN ANTONIO -- When commissioner David Stern announced the NBA's minimum
age had been raised from 18 to 19, he was being overly simplistic and
inaccurate.
Under terms of the new six-year collective bargaining agreement, there
could still be 18-year-olds playing in the NBA.
Previous eligibility rules stated that American players could not become
draft-eligible until their high school class graduated -- wording that
allowed some players to enter the league at 17. The new rules mandate
players to wait one year after their high-school class graduates,
meaning that players born in November or December could be appear in NBA
games prior to their 19th birthday -- provided they graduated at 17.
Rules for international players also changed. Previously, a foreign-born
player needed to turn 18 before the draft. Under the new rules (which
will not affect this year's draft next Tuesday in New York),
international players must turn 19 by the end of the calendar year in
which they become draft eligible -- again leaving a two-month window in
which an 18-year-old might be playing in the NBA.
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