You are kidding right?
The kid is not NFL ready, and he never will be.
But he is much more likely to be successful in life with a degree than just trying to eke out a year "career" as a KR/PR in the NFL.
And sorry, I meant the Top 1-2% of all college football players.
Of all the boys in America who play high school varsity football, less than 6 percent will go on to play at the college level, including those who go on to Division III schools were scholarships are not allowed. Of the precious few who do go on to play college football, only 1.8 percent will be drafted by the NFL. Bottom line? If your child is playing high school football, his chances of making it to the NFL are 0.08 percent.
Your Child’s Future in Sports: The Real Odds | iMOM
and again:
http://www.businessinsider.com/odds-college-athletes-become-professionals-2012-2?op=1
Here Are The Odds That Your Kid Becomes A Professional Athlete (Hint: They're Small)
TONY MANFRED
FEB. 10, 2012, 4:21 PM 161,629 5
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Even if your kid is good at sports in high school, gets a scholarship, and excels in college, there's almost no way they are going to go pro.
Scott Soshnick of Bloomberg tweeted a link today to the NCAA's official estimated probabilities that athletes in six major sports become professionals.
Only one sport (baseball) had more than 2% of NCAA players go pro.
These numbers are artificially low since they only count players who go pro in the US. But either way, the chances are really, really small.
Baseball: 11.6% of college players play professionally, 0.6% of high school players do
Baseball: 11.6% of college players play professionally, 0.6% of high school players do
AP Images
High school players: 471,025
College players: 31,264
Draftees: 806
Source: NCAA
Football: 1.7% of college players play professionally, 0.08% of high school players do
Football: 1.7% of college players play professionally, 0.08% of high school players do
Streeter Lecka/Getty Images
High school players: 1,108,441
College players: 67,887
Draftees: 255
Source: NCAA
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/odds-college-athletes-become-professionals-2012-2?op=1#ixzz2oyxpT1tV
Of course the likelihood of making it a career in the NFL is not that high, considering the
average career is around 3-7 years, depending on whom you believe. However, I do not have to look far to find examples of much better college players failing to make it in the NFL. See Tim Tebow, Jamarcus Russell, and Matt Leinart for a few recent examples of an
"elite" college player no longer playing in the NFL and all three were a FIRST ROUND pick (and 2 Heisman Trophy winners, as well), which GAIII will not be.
I just think that GAIII needs better advisers, so he can make the right decision about going pro, because there are almost never players who are drafted solely to be a KR when you can draft WR and RB to do the job, anyway, neither or which he has proven to be proficient at doing on a regular basis.
Do I wish him ill will?
NO, but I do think he needs to sit down and REALLY investigate his odds of playing and succeeding for a decade in the NFL vs. a successful life outside of football when one has a degree from a place like ND.