Posted On: October 27, 2009 by Jason B. Wolf

How to Play Basketball Overseas?

I get a lot of calls and e-mails from basketball players who want to play overseas. What's the best way to get the attention of European, Asian, South American and African professional basketball coaches and teams? How good is the competition over there? What should I do position myself to play overseas basketball when my amateur career is over?

Unfortunately, the answer is complicated. We will explore the best ways to go about finding an overseas team in a later blog post. For now, let's talk about what I think is the absolute wrong way to find a basketball team overseas.

For every Jeremy Tyler, who left high school early to play basketball overseas in Israel, there are a lot more players who wish they could go over there but are not mature enough in their game and off the court to play overseas.

Tyler signed a one-year, $140,000 contract. Apparently he plans to use this league as a jump-start to a higher, more lucrative league next year. Then he'll be ready to jump to the NBA when he's eligible for the draft in 2011 (Remember that you're not draft-eligible in the NBA until one full school year after your high school class graduated - or in Tyler's case, after the class would have graduated).

One has to question the wisdom of Tyler's decision. He is passing up the chance to earn a high school diploma. Here is Tyler's reasoning:

“I left high school early because I felt I could develop my game more by playing professional,” Tyler said.
“Why?”
“Because high school sports wasn't that fun,” said Tyler, 18. “I wasn't getting better. I was developing bad habits. Hopefully here I can develop my skills, and I can show the world I have talent.”

Here's hoping his basketball career works out and he gets drafted in the NBA in 2011. If basketball doesn't work for him, he will lack even the most basic of credentials (a high school diploma) and be virtually unemployable in any career, even minimum wage jobs. This is a short-sighted and narrow-minded decision in my opinion, one that has nothing to do with basketball and everything to do with money.