Mon Jun 15, 2009 12:13 pm EDT
When big Bryce Harper made the cover of Sports Illustrated two weeks ago, I knew we'd soon again be hearing from the 16-year-old 'chosen one.'
But not quite this soon.
On Sunday, the sophomore from Las Vegas found his way into national headlines again when his father announced that Bryce will forgo his final two years of high school and use a GED to enroll in a community college this August. Though it more or less makes a mockery of our education system, the Harpers' plan would make Bryce eligible for the 2010 draft, where he could conceivably be the Nationals' No. 1 pick and eventually join forces with Stephen Strasburg to save Washington baseball from itself.
It's a controversial decision, to be sure, but Ron Harper says he and his son are prepared to hear from the inevitable haters.
From the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
"There are going to be critics. I can't worry about what people think," Ron Harper said. "People are going to see what they want to see and say what they want to say. I think this prepares him for life, playing the game of baseball.
"People question your parenting and what you're doing. Honestly, we don't think it's that big a deal. He's not leaving school to go work in a fast-food restaurant. Bryce is a good kid. He's smart, and he's going to get his education."
From my viewpoint, I'm not going to act like a truant officer on Harper's decision when viewed in a vacuum. It's quite clear that Harper has loads of talent, lives to play baseball and has been groomed to play professional baseball ever since he and his family realized that he was much better than everyone else. It's obvious he has that physical attributes to succeed and he'd be drafted in two years anyway, so why delay the inevitable? Is an 18-year-old really that much better equipped to handle the pressures of grand expectations than a 16-year-old? As much as people will want to say that Harper should stay in school like a normal kid, the truth is that whatever normal life he had disappeared the minute he showed up on the cover of a magazine at homes across the country.
Plus, in an age when tennis and golf prodigies leave their families for top-flight academies before the age of 10 and future basketball studs are identified in the sixth grade, what's the problem with Harper setting out on a very defined career path? Being the top pick in the draft could net him $20 million or more, so making a play while the chips are on his side is just simply a smart move — especially in the volatile world of baseball talent.
The problem I do have with it, though, is that there are no doubt thousands of delusional parents who will see this news and think that maybe it's a viable path for their nowhere-near-as-talented sons and daughters. While the Harpers can't make their decision based on what other lemmings might do, I hope the door closes behind them.
What do you think?
Big League Stew is an MLB blog edited by Kevin Kaduk. Email him, and follow him on Twitter.

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6296 Comments
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I think its a calculated risk. There is no real downside to it.
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Scott Boras told them they'd be rich. Again proving he is the most evil person in baseball.
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"Though it more or less makes a mockery of our education system" - No, the education system does that just fine.
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Any other kid? No.
Even Strasburg wasn't that great until he went to college.
Also, Matt- Boras tells his clients they'll be rich. He is correct. He does not tell them they will be good at baseball. He is an agent, not a fairy godmother.
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If any other kid in this country wanted to bypass their remaining years and get a GED (and there are several that should), they would be told no.
I am not sure how it works elsewhere, but here in Illinois to pursue a GED, it is an age thing, not a year in high school thing.
Typical special treatment b.s. for athletes.
Food for thought, what happens if he is a bust out (because God knows that never happens) or he gets injured (that never happens either).......then what?
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I often tell folks to skip a year or two between high school and college, then once they know what they want to do, they should apply themselves at that point. If Bryce already knows what he wants to do, and he has the skills to do it, there's no reason that he shouldn't enter college early.
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Financially, I know the longer he waits to get drafted the greater the risk, but couldn't they take out an insurance policy with Lloyd's of London to lock in any potential value that might be lost through a career threatening injury while still an amateur. I see this as a bad precedent in general.
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In any event, he will get $20m richer in the blink of an eye and the worst case scenario is that he will go down in history as one of the biggest busts in MLB.
But that $$$ will make it all worth it.
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