Talk about fallacies. There aren't that many one and done guys in college basketball. Not one of the teams in this year's FF had a one and done. Neither did most of the best teams in college. Ohio St is not a good measuring stick. They have an idiot coach who recruits nothing but one and dones, and they've lost scholarships for doing so.
Either way, the fact remains the best players are not around long enough in college basketball anymore.
Boy you've got it in for my alma mater. Games like that are not indicitive of college basketball. The competitiveness I'm talking about is how Northwestern can beat Michigan St or how Western Kentucky can beat Louisville, both of which happened this year.
Well there are too many games in November/December like Presbyterian/Duke. When you're talking about college kids, though, I don't think the other upsets you mentioned rocked the college basketball world or anything. Michigan St. wasn't playing that well in the regular season, and Louisville wasn't a powerhouse after all. Western Kentucky was actually pretty good.
That's the excuse bad college teams give. The difference is they have a point. Bad college teams can be badly overmatched so they may lose a lot in spite of giving a good effort. What's the Lakers exuse? What's any NBA team's excuse for losing by 30-40 points. For a league where there ought to be a certain amount of parity in talent, at least relative to college players, I sure do see lots of teams, not even terrible ones always, getting blown out. How does a team good enough to reach the playoffs, cough, New Orleans, cough, get beat by 58 points? Denver's good but they aint that good. I've seen postal workers hustle more than some NBA teams.
Sometimes it's not your day and you have to live to fight another day. It's like in baseball, why do 8-1 games become 20-1? Because the other team takes out their best players, and does not throw their best pitchers. And it's also human nature...you see it in all sports when you fall hopelessly behind, including college basketball.
Sandra