Former G League center Abdullah Ahmed has committed to BYU, he told Rivals.
The 22-year-old has been cleared to play by the NCAA, though his official eligibility clock is still being finalized. He’s expected to have at least two seasons of eligibility, with a chance at a third.
Ahmed is expected to enroll at BYU for the second semester and sit out the remainder of the season. He will officially suit up for the Cougars for the start of the 2026-27 season.
The 6-foot-10 big man originally from Egypt has played the last two seasons with the Westchester Knicks, the G-League affiliate of the New York Knicks.
Ahmed appeared in 15 games last season, averaging 4.0 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 18.3 minutes per contest. The season prior, he averaged 5.8 points and 6.9 rebounds.
Ahmed ultimately chose BYU over Houston, but received college looks from schools like Mississippi State, Auburn, Louisville, UCLA, and more.
How G League players can now play college basketball
On Monday, we saw G-League guard London Johnson commit to Louisville after playing professionally for three seasons. There’s been a clear shift in college basketball, with the NCAA easing its stance on professional players making the move to the college game.
In the past, any player that had played professionally would be ineligible from college. All players needed to be amateurs, meaning they hadn’t taken a salary or signed a pro contract.
But NIL and revenue sharing have changed all this. Once players could get paid, the line between “amateur” and “pro” blurred.
Most G-League players — outside of the Ignite program — are not earning big money (an average of $40,000/year). The NCAA considers that low of a salary as covering “actual and necessary expenses,” like living costs, travel, housing, etc. Players who were making above the “necessary expenses” have to pay back the difference.
With that logic, the NCAA determined that G-League players aren’t truly professionals in the way the old rule defined it. Under the new approach, G-League players could be deemed eligible for college basketball if they’re still within five year of their high school graduation. The main factor that jeopardizes eligibility is if they’ve gone through the NBA Draft process or previously signed an NBA contract.
The NCAA is basically admitting that it’s impossible to keep defining who is a “pro” and who is a “amateur”. On top of that, players in college basketball are already being compensated through NIL/revenue sharing.
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