Overtime Elite
Bryson Warren
Bryson Warren is a pro basketball player. He earns at least $100,000 a year. His face is on a trading card. Thousands of fans follow him on social media.
Bryson is also a teenager. At 16, he joined a new pro basketball league called Overtime Elite (OTE). The league was created for high schoolers.
OTE pays talented juniors and seniors to train and play in Atlanta, Georgia. While there, they also finish high school. The players hope to then be drafted by the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Does that sound like the chance of a lifetime? For Bryson, it was—even if it meant leaving his home in Arkansas. “I knew in my heart it was the right thing to do,” he says.
But the new league has raised a big question in the sports world. Are teens too young for the stress that comes with going pro?
Bryson Warren is a pro basketball player. He earns at least $100,000 a year. His face is on a trading card. Fans follow him on social media.
Bryson is also a teen. At 16, he joined a pro basketball league. It’s new. It’s called Overtime Elite (OTE). The league is for high schoolers. It pays them to train and play.
OTE is in Atlanta, Georgia. While there, players also finish high school. They hope to be drafted by the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Does that sound like the chance of a lifetime? For Bryson, it was. He left his home in Arkansas to join OTE. “I knew in my heart it was the right thing to do,” he says.
But the new league has raised a big question. Are teens too young to go pro?
Bryson Warren is a pro basketball player who earns at least $100,000 a year. His face is on a trading card, and thousands of fans follow him on social media.
Bryson is also a teenager. At 16, he joined a new pro basketball league that was created for high schoolers. It’s called Overtime Elite (OTE).
This league pays talented juniors and seniors to train and play in Atlanta, Georgia. They also finish high school while they are there. The players hope to then be drafted by the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Does that sound like the chance of a lifetime? For Bryson, it was—even though it meant leaving his home in Arkansas. “I knew in my heart it was the right thing to do,” he explains.
But the new league has raised a big question in the sports world: Are teens too young for the stress that comes with going pro?