There are so many stories – including conference commissioners coming out and saying that the NCAA needs to put in ridiculous requirements saying that players can’t go to the NBA Draft for multiple years if they come to play college ball. But how bad are one and done players ruining the game.
So, I went to ESPN’s NBA Draft site to see who are the top 25 college freshman – if they declare for the draft (some will obviously come back).
You will notice a really interesting thing from the list. None of the top 25 college freshman go to school at Villanova, Kansas, Michigan or Loyola-Chicago. That’s right – none!
If Duke had beat Kansas, 4 of them would have been playing since the Blue Devils have Marvin Bagley III (2nd), Wendell Carter Jr (10th), Trevon Duval (14th), and Gary Trent (24th). But none of those talented freshman could seem to stop Malik Newman from scoring 32 points.
Kentucky had 6 of the top 25 freshmen, and the best they could do was losing in the Sweet 16 to a Kansas State team seeded worse than them. Not that making the Sweet 16 is bad, but you would think that a team that has two of the top 15 players in the country (and two others who would be drafted according to the rankings) would be able to beat a team that has no one in the top 60.
All in all, 15 teams had a top 25 freshman (well 24, one player Mitchell Robinson apparently agreed to play at Western Kentucky and then never went to WKU – but I don’t know much about this story….)
- 2 had no postseason (Dayton and UNLV)
- 1 lost in the NIT (Oregon)
- 7 lost in the first round of the NCAAs (Arizona, Arkansas, Miami, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Virginia Tech)
- 2 lost in the second round (Michigan St and Alabama)
- 2 lost in the Sweet 16 (Kentucky and Syracuse)
- 1 lost in the Elite 8 (Duke)
So, 20% of the teams with potential one and dones didn’t even make the tournament, and 67% of the teams with potential one and dones couldn’t get past their first round opponent. And none of the teams with this amazing NBA talent on their team made the Final Four.
So, if the teams that have talent that sticks around in college for a few years are the ones playing for the championship, how is it again that the one and dones are ruining the game.
The real problem for college basketball is if these kids are likely one and done, their chances of taking money and ruining the reputation of their coaches is more likely. The only thing that one and done players appear to be ruining is the naive reputation of amateurism in college basketball. I normally side with the NCAA on how players shouldn’t be paid – they are already getting paid with a free education. But this request from the NCAA that forces student-athletes to stay at the university for multiple years ends that. If an athlete is good enough to make it to the professional level, the NCAA has no right to restrict that.