LaVar Ball says G League changes was response to his JBA

After the NBA’s recent changes to the G League, LaVar Ball spoke out, calling it a response to his ill-fated JBA.

LaVar Ball ventured into unchartered waters in the summer of 2018 with the formation of the Junior Basketball Association (JBA). Ideally, the league would have served as a bridge between high school and the NBA as an alternative route to NCAA basketball. And for one season, it did do that, offering kids an early chance at professional basketball in the states.

But the ill-fated league ran into a litany of problems ranging from payments to poor attendance to lack of talent. Once LaMelo Ball found an alternative route himself to NCAA basketball in the NBL, the league vanished as quickly as it was formed. The league never served as much of a threat to either college basketball or the G League, but that didn’t stop LaVar from thinking as much.

During an interview with Heavy, Ball was asked about the G League’s recent changes to serve as an alternative itself to college basketball and made it known that he felt it was at least partially a response to the JBA.

“Well the NCAA and the G-League have to do something different and I don’t need people on the outside saying that, ‘Oh Lavar Ball, he did that…’ I’ma do what I do. People gotta respond to it. I just want to open their eyes and say you know if you want to do something, go do what you want to do and not go through other things…If you want to go play basketball, then why you got to study for a chemistry test and a Spanish test if you really want to focus on basketball?

So like I said they have to make some decisions or how are we going to keep the youth? And if you just want to play basketball, then this is for you. Now it’s not for everybody because you might not be talented as you think you are, but guess what? You can get an education so you can get a job and take care of yourself. But if you want to go all in, go 100% in and want perfection that’s your option and if it doesn’t work out, there’s another option and that’s the end of that.”

The sentiment Ball has about the necessity of an alternative and the reasoning for it is sound. It’s the same logic he used when explaining the purpose of the JBA. But Ball also overstates the impact of the JBA. In the end, Ball’s league was a small blip on the radars of the NCAA and NBA that left as quickly as it came.

The argument Ball may have, though, is that the JBA may have laid the blueprint on what an alternative could look like. Providing players with an outlet to play games, train and focus on basketball as opposed to schooling.

In reality, though, the only true threat to the NCAA and the G League was the Next Stars program in the National Basketball League in Australia. Ironically, LaMelo did ultimately play a role in changing the game, but it certainly didn’t include the JBA.

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LaVar Ball says JBA prepared LaMelo Ball for NBL

After his recent success in the NBL with Illawarra Hawks, LaVar Ball has credited the JBA for developing LaMelo into the player he is.

LaMelo Ball’s trip to the National Basketball League and the Illawarra Hawks was as unconventional as they come. After leaving high school prior to his junior year, Ball made stops in Lithuania, returned stateside to his father’s new league, the Junior Basketball Association (JBA), then joined the standout players from that team as part of a tour across Europe before opting to once again return stateside for a year with SPIRE Institute.

The stop in the JBA was unprecedented and, for many, a move that potentially cost Ball a year of development. Clearly the most talented player in the league, Ball was unchallenged and posted gaudy numbers throughout the team’s lone season. The trip overseas did little more to push Ball before he opted to return to America.

However, according to LaMelo’s father LaVar, the JBA served a much bigger role in preparing his son for his future stop in Australia, something he talked about during a recent interview in Australia.

“I had a league called the JBA, which … I primed him to do like this. We played in different countries, against older guys, so this is nothing new when I see him get these triple-doubles now. He was doing that in my league but people was throwing that to the side ‘cause they said, ‘Oh, he’s playing for his dad. It don’t count.’”

While everything LaVar stated is true, the difference in playing second division teams in small European countries and NBL teams is drastic. It’s impressive that LaMelo is still considered a top-tier prospect despite the detour.

It’s also not a surprise to see LaVar taking credit for Ball’s success. In reality, LaMelo has exceeded in spite of LaVar’s JBA, not because of it.

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