Eighth-grader is taking on a lot of pressure

ERIC SONDHEIMER

Mark Avery, a 15-year-old from Thousand Oaks, already has committed to play college basketball at Kentucky, a decision that will prematurely subject him to media and fan scrutiny.

Having witnessed the immense pressure put on and attention paid to Taylor King after he committed to UCLA before the start of his freshman basketball season at Santa Ana Mater Dei, I have come to the conclusion that parents need to step in and just say, "No" when college coaches seek such early commitments.

Those commitments only raise expectations to an unrealistic level and aren't healthy or beneficial for the athlete, who is immediately and constantly subjected to media and fan scrutiny, denying him the opportunity to mature in a calm, controlled manner.

Now 15-year-old Michael Avery, a 6-foot-4 eighth-grader from Thousand Oaks, has put himself squarely in the cross-hairs of amateur talent evaluators by announcing earlier this month that he has committed to play basketball at Kentucky.

He made his college choice before choosing which high school to attend.

If he hadn't realized how his life would change after his choice became public, he was given a wake-up call when his phone began to ring off the hook.

"I'm getting a lot of phone calls I'm not used to," he said a couple days after his commitment.

The area code of many of those callers: 859, which happens to be Lexington, Ky.

Welcome to your brave new world, Mr. Avery.

"I know they really like basketball now," he said.

Why Kentucky Coach Billy Gillispie would offer a scholarship to an eighth-grader from the Conejo Valley based on his performance in one tournament last month in Ohio is a mystery that won't be solved until November 2011, which is when Avery can sign a letter of intent with the Wildcats. Only then will Gillispie be allowed to comment under NCAA rules.

Avery played for Belmont Shore in a travel tournament two weekends ago at USC's Galen Center, and he looked overmatched in his brief appearances playing against high school juniors and seniors. Anyone could have picked him out as the eighth-grader.

The problem is he'll never be compared with his fellow classmates. The moment he steps onto a court, people will envision him wearing a Kentucky uniform. It's a vision that doesn't fit right now, but that's the fallout of such an early commitment.

"This is the kind of fuel that just ignites people who see faults in college basketball," said Jim Haney, executive director of the National Assn. of Basketball Coaches.


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