...what information Mika had, what advice he was being given, or even what his long term goals are.
Kind of weird, if you ask me, to think that someone could make those assertions with "logical certainty" when they aren't the ones getting draft evaluation reports from NBA teams, like Mika would have access to. Or who aren't speaking with agents who have NBA contacts and have the ability to get a pretty good idea of what his demand in the league might be - like Mika has.
Is it really logical to think that you've got the same amount of information as Mika?
Is it really logical to think that you know what his goals are and the reason that he made the decision he made?
If it was me - I likely stay in school. I'm not saying I don't understand where people are coming from who believe that staying at BYU was the better path. I'm just saying that none of us - NONE of us - have the information Mika has or know what he wants out of life to be able to claim that his decision was good or bad.
That requires a LOT of assuming. And you know what happens when you assume something.