<P> Many prep - to - pro players like Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, and Tracy Mcgrady went on to become star players in the NBA . Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant, LeBron James have all won the league's MVP Award; as well as holding at least one NBA title under their belt, and are widely regarded as future Hall - of - Famers . Dwight Howard, Jermaine O'Neal and Amar'e Stoudemire also became perennial All - Stars in their prime . However, not all high - schoolers were successful . Kwame Brown and Eddy Curry are widely regarded as draft busts, while Jonathan Bender and Darius Miles had their careers cut short by injury . Korleone Young (drafted in 1998) and Leon Smith (drafted in 1999) only played a handful of games in the NBA, while Lenny Cooke and DeAngelo Collins, both of whom declared for the 2002 Draft, went undrafted and never played in the NBA . </P> <P> Beginning 2005, both the NBA and the players' union started to discuss the possibility of implementing a new age limit . The league lobbied for an age minimum of 20 while the union was against an age limit . Finally in July 2005, both sides compromised in the new collective bargaining agreement, requiring that the minimum age for entry into the NBA be 19 and that entrants be at least one year removed from high school . For the first time, teams are also allowed to send players, with two years of NBA experience or less, to the NBA Development League (NBA D - League). </P> <P> The terms of the new agreement ended the practice of drafting high school players, starting in the 2006 Draft . A high school player must wait at least a year to be eligible for selection . However, they are not required to spend that year in college . In 2008, high school star Brandon Jennings decided to skip college and play professional basketball in Italy . After a year, he was eligible for the 2009 draft and was selected 10th by the Milwaukee Bucks . In the 2010 draft, Latavious Williams, who did not qualify academically to go to college, spent a year playing in the NBA D - League before he was drafted in the second round . Emmanuel Mudiay decided to take a route similar to that of Brandon Jennings by skipping college to play professionally in China in 2014 before being selected by the Denver Nuggets at pick 7 a year later . In the 2015 draft, Satnam Singh Bhamara, who did not qualify academically to go to college, went straight to the NBA draft as a post-graduate after being at IMG Academy for five years . He would be taken by the Dallas Mavericks with the 52nd pick in the draft, thus becoming the first high school student to be drafted since the rule changes . In the 2016 draft, one of the Top--10 players that was declared eligible for NCAA play in 2016, Thon Maker, decided to enter the draft instead as a post-graduate from Orangeville Prep in Orangeville, Ontario, Canada due to him originally declaring himself as eligible for college in 2015 . Thon would also mark the first player to be drafted directly from a Canadian high school, as well as the second player to enter as a post-graduate . He'd also be the first high schooler to be drafted in the first round since 2005, being drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks with the tenth pick in the draft, thus becoming the first high school lottery pick since 2005 . Most recently, in the 2018 draft, Anfernee Simons from the IMG Academy was also drafted in the NBA with the 24th, with Simons being a postgraduate there like Satnam Singh Bhamara was three years prior . In addition to him, Mitchell Robinson took a year off of playing time after high school due to exiting Western Kentucky University early without playing there, which left him drafted as the 36th pick . </P> <P> Some players support the new age limit . Gerald Green called it "a smart move", saying that "(not everybody is) LeBron James...He came in ready and he dominated the league . There's a lot of players that have to get developed . Me, I've got to get developed . But I guess that age limit, that one year of college experience, can get you more developed and I think that's pretty good ." Others, however, strongly criticize the rule . Andrew Bynum said "That's something I'll never understand . Because in no other business can the owner, or a stock trader or a C.E.O. of a company try to protect themselves by putting rules like that ." Former Florida Gators and current Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Billy Donovan believed that the rule made high schoolers feel like they were being punished . </P>

Who was the last nba player drafted out of high school