6A - Thursday, April 5, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaiiy.com Report: Burke to enter NBA Draft Why you shouldn't hate Trey Burke By DANIEL WASSERMAN Daily Sports Writer According to multiple reports, freshman point guard Trey Burke has decided to forgo the remainder of his basketball career at Michigan and will enter the upcoming NBA Draft. CBS Sports was the first to report the news about Burke's departure on Wednesday. The Detroit Free Press - which was the first to report Burke's plan to inquire about his draft prospects two weeks ago, citing his father, Benji - later reported that Burke met with Michigan coach John Beilein on Monday. If the reports prove true, this marks the second consecutive year that the Wolverines will enter an offseason with a void at point guard following an under- classman starter bolting for the NBA. Last season, Darius Morris left after his sophomore season and was drafted in the second round by the Los Angeles Lak- ers. Word of Burke's decision quickly spread across the Inter- net, prompting Burke's family to respond. "Trey Burke has not declared for the NBA draft. He is still enrolled at the University of Michigan," Benji tweeted Wednesday afternoon. But even if Burke has made up his mind and informed coaches of his intentions, the freshman won't be expected to declare within the next few days. This year, the NCAA has attemnterd to reo-ulate NBA Draft declarations by imposing an April 10 deadline - 19 days before the NBA-mandated April 29 deadline for players to declare for the draft - for athletes who have officially declared for the NBA to withdraw their names and return to school before the June 28 draft. But the April 10 deadline leaves itself susceptible to a loophole. Should Burke officially declare any time before April 10, he must pull by out by that date in order to be eligible to return to college. But he could choose to wait until after the NCAA's deadline, and as long as he declares before April 29, he'd still be eligible for the draft. This leaves additional time to further gather information or allow time for a possible change of heart. Even if Burke would chose to return, Michigan would still have a void at point guard - albeit, in the backup role. This year, senior guard Stu Douglass slid over from his shooting guard role to run the point when Burke was on the bench. But Douglass's eligibility in Ann Arbor has expired. Addi- tionally, freshman guard Carl- ton Brundidge - one of only two remaining Wolverines with any experience at point guard - chose to transfer after the sea- son ended. In his first year as a Wol- verine, Burke led Michigan in points, assists, steals, blocks, minutes played and 3-point makes. Burke is given much of the credit for the program's first conference title since 1986. Take all the expectations you might've had regard- ing next year's Michigan men's basketball team and throw them as vigorously as you can at something hard, so they explode into a million little pieces. Admire the pieces of what was to be a surefire top-10 team next year for a moment, then sweep them up and trash them. But don't trash Trey DANIEL Burke. W WASSERMAN Just15 days ago, in an interview with Burke's father Benji, the Detroit Free Press reported that the point guard was inquiring about his NBA Draft stock and leaning toward going pro. After an initial panic, most fans stepped back from the pro- verbial cliff after realizing that no matter how good of a season Burke had, his 5-foot-11 frame wasn't going to grow three inch- es into a first-round pick over the next few weeks. Almost every draft analyst gave the freshman a possible late second-round grade but said he'd most likely go undrafted. And then came two eye-open- ing projected rankings forthe 2012-13 season. On Tuesday, ESPN's Andy Katz pegged Michigan at No. 8, but warned that it "might change by Thursday." Later that day, CBS Sports' Jeff Goodman and Gary Parrish tabbed the Wolverines at No. 5. But at 2:57 p.m. on Wednes- day - less than 24 hours after his ranlinworep- u bnlished - Goodman announced via Twit- ter that he had "some HUGE news." Moments later, he broke the story that Burke is planning to depart Michigan after his freshman season. And boom. Just like that, Michigan fans bolted for the cliff and jumped without ever looking back. Even with key departures, including Zack Novak, Stu Dou- glass and Evan Smotrycz, the Wolverines were going tobe good. How good? A lot of that depended on how the most tal- ented recruiting class coming to Ann Arbor since the Fab Five II class of 1994 would pan out. Now we'll never know. And if Michigan hopes to earn a 2611 NCAA Tournament bid, that incoming class needs to add a point guard. And even if it does, the Wolverines just went from a top-5 contender nationally to a team that may fight to stay out of the Big Ten's worst five teams. Fans - the same ones who let the basketball program go unno- ticed for much of the last decade - didn't like the taste of that. They took to Twitter to call Burke names. They took to mes- sage boards to doubt that he'll ever make it. They commented on articles saying that his depar- ture means that he isn't Michi- gan material. Nothing he hasn't heard before, though. A year ago, the casual Wolverine fan didn't even know Burke's name. Two years ago, he was a barely a Big Ten- quality prospect, committing to perennial bottom-feeder Penn State. And three years ago, one of the only schools to show him interest was Ohio - ironically, the same team that ended his career at Michigan. Do I think Burke should leave? No. With another year under his belt and the expected improve- ments that typically accompany added experience, his chances of being drafted soar. Some top draft analysts who project Burke going undrafted this year label him as a first-round pick in next year's draft. No, he won't grow from this year to next year, but he won't shrink, either. But to those trashing Burke, I ask you this: What does he owe you? A Big Ten Championship? He already brought you that, and almost single handedly at that. After Darius Morris left follow- ing last season, many wondered how successfully John Beilein could work around a void at point guard. At even the mere thought of Smotrycz and Tim Hardaway Jr. struggling like they did this season, it would've been hard to project the Wol- verines finishing above .500 in conference play. But instead, a level-headed Burke carried Michigan through one of the toughest schedules in the coun- try. He led Michigan in nearly every meaningful stat category, including blocks - yes, blocks - and in doing so, the Wolverines won a conference that was wide- ly considered the nation's best. Does he owe you wins in the future? No.. But what future point-guard recruit wouldn't want to play for Beilein, who has sent point guards to the NBA in back-to-back years? Yes, Burke and Morris are both immensely talented, but both saw mete- oric rises in their stock in a very short timeframe. Landing better recruits typically equals more wins. But none of that matters, because Burke doesn't owe you, me or the University anything anymore. The University gave him a scholarship, which he more than repaid for by bringing in fans to fill the seats, retailers selling his No. 3 jersey and all the addition- al profits that come along with a major Division I program that just won a conference cham- pionship. But why do we come to school, anyways? The clich6 answer is for the degree - some- thing Burke won't attain, at least in the near future - but last I checked, no one's end goal in life is a college degree. We go to col- lege to earn the degree that will one day earn us a paycheck. For more than 99.9 percent of college students, the paycheck we want to earn means we'll need that degree. But not for Burke. Last year's final draft selection, Isaiah Thomas, earned $473,604 this year and is due for $762,195 next season. Even top-of-the-class Ross Business School students wouldn't dream of entrance-level salaries like that. And if he goes undrafted and is forced to test European- league waters, a six-figure sti- pend is still headed his way. It's easy to bash Burke. The move seems rushed and impul- sive - exactly the opposite of the uncanny composure Burke displayed for a freshman on the court. But Burke is a good kid, lacking the ego and immaturity that too many young athletes possess these days. 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