He became a star point guard in his collegiate career, and was named a first team All-American his senior year along with future NBA players Jay Williams, Juan Dixon, Drew Gooden, and Dan Dickau.
Meanwhile, Logan and his agent argued that he should have been offered a guaranteed contract since he was in fact the 29th player taken in the draft as the Minnesota Timberwolves had to forfeit their first-round pick due to the Joe Smith salary cap-evading scandal.
[6] In November 2002, Howard claimed that he would be available to sign with the Warriors in five to seven days and disputed report that Logan's continued absence was a "holdout".
[7] On November 26, 2002, Logan was reportedly working out in Washington DC, where his agent Bill Strickland was based, with no sign of a resolution to his contract dispute.
In an interview with the Cincinnati Post, Logan stated that his holdout had been a "frustrating process", that he was looking forward to getting his career started, and that he was hoping to join the Warriors in early January 2003.
Signing with the NBDL or any professional leagues would make Logan ineligible to enter the 2003 NBA draft because the Warriors would retain his rights.
Mobile Revelers head coach Sam Vincent claimed that Logan was not in game shape and did not express a desire to return to the NBDL, but was nevertheless open to him re-joining the team.
[12] In February 2003, Logan fired his agent Bill Strickland and signed with Joel Bell, presumably because he did not know joining the NBDL would prevent him from entering the 2003 NBA draft.
Despite the fact that Logan did not play basketball for over a year, he was not eligible to enter the 2003 NBA draft and the Warriors continued to retain his rights due to his brief stint in the NBDL.
In June 2003, Logan hired presumptive first overall pick LeBron James' agent Aaron Goodwin as an advisor and stopped speaking to Joel Bell.
[16] On November 8, 2004, Tycoon's assistant coach Jalie Mitchell stated that Logan had left the team before he appeared in a game.
[21] He (along with his high school teammate Sam Clancy Jr.) was one of nine players selected in the 2002 NBA Draft who never played a game in the league and the highest pick out of the nine.