#Repost @colossill • • • • • 🔥 Damn, they moved the goalpost again. If colleges awarded bachelor’s degrees in Arrogance and Self-Delusion, NCAA bigwigs would have an easy double major, and then they would be qualified to advise the players they claim to love so deeply. The ancient monolith is letting basketball players who test the NBA draft talk to agents. But not just any agents. According to ESPN, those agents must have a bachelor's degree, National Basketball Players’ Association certification for at least three consecutive years, professional liability insurance and completion of an in-person exam taken at the NCAA office in Indianapolis in early November. All the agents should really need is NBPA certification; if the players’ union trusts an agent, the NCAA should, too. But the bachelor’s degree requirement is what stops you. It is already becoming known as the “Rich Paul rule” because Paul, who represents LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Ben Simmons and other high-profile players, does not own a bachelor’s degree. Via @williedlive #richpaulrule @chrisbroussard68 #WillieDForDistrictB http://www.williedfordistrictb.com #faithwithoutworkisdead #30yearsofControversy https://www.instagram.com/p/B1Ag6MkjveuwqNmUSOR6Ikkwg1dmQIkOpD3eSc0/?igshid=aik6mjcj3a3r