Kevin Durant was one of the first players to be impacted by the NBA's one and done rule that was constituted with the 2006 draft.
He played for one year at the University of Texas under coach Rick Barnes before leaving and being drafted by the Seattle Supersonics.
Durant, however, doesn't agree with the one and done culture that the NBA has created and feels like there has to be a better way to develop young players.
“Nowadays, these coaches are just like daycare owners,” Durant told Jonathan Abrams of Bleacher Report. “They're like, We're just going to get these guys for a year and we're not going to really coach them, because I know they're going to be out the next year. That's not how basketball's supposed to played. That's not how you're supposed to be coached. You can't teach the game like that.”
Durant did feel like he learned a lot from Barnes in his one year, but he doesn't think the players nowadays are learning as much. The coaches now after one year they can ship them off to the NBA, and there will be one or two new future lottery picks on the roster.
Article Continues BelowOne of the other big issues with the one and done rule is that it leaves a year in jeopardy that a player could get hurt and not drafted.
When Shaun Livingston had a terrible knee injury his rookie season he had already gotten a contract and was able to use the NBA system to help him heal.
If he had been in college though the chances are he would have gone undrafted and might have never even made it to the league even though he had the talent to.
For Livingston, though he has been able to make a really nice NBA career for himself, and that was because he was able to make the jump out of high school straight to the NBA.