Commentary
The storylines that shaped the sport
Updated: December 31, 2009, 12:46 PM ET
By Staff | ESPN.com
As we close out the decade, Andy Katz and his some of his ESPN.com colleagues take a look back at the most meaningful storylines and headlines of the past 10 years
Katz's Top Five
1. The age limit and the birth of the one-and-done: In the first part of the decade, elite high school seniors were heading directly to the NBA. In the latter part, they were forced into staying at least one season in college. The arguments raged about what was best for the high school, college and pro game. The debate will continue into the next decade, or at least until the new collective bargaining agreement in 2011. But it's clear the college game has had more freshmen star power the past four years.[+] Enlarge

AP Photo/Haraz N. GhanbariGeorge Mason's historic path to the Final Four included wins over heavyweights Michigan State, North Carolina and UConn.
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AP Photo/Sue OgrockiThe NBA's age rule that brought one-and-done stars to the college game has been a much-debated topic.
There is no question that early entries into the NBA has changed the college basketball landscape. The NBA is the most talked-about factor in a young player's life, and coaches now have to recruit with the pros in mind. It has gotten a bit out of control, and nobody really has a handle on the issue. It remains the biggest issue for the game going forward. Bob Knight's firing seemed an impossible happening, but it happened. Knight picked himself up after the most traumatic happening of his professional career and promptly made Texas Tech relevant, breaking Dean Smith's record for career wins and becoming the first coach to 900 wins. Who would have predicted that Knight would be a card-carrying member of the media by decade's end? Roy Williams' emotional journey from Kansas to North Carolina had everything but a seat on Oprah's couch, but the story didn't end there. Williams has led the Tar Heels to three Final Fours and two national championships on his way to the Naismith Hall of Fame, and he is not done yet. Ol' Roy is still recruiting his tail off and Carolina is the biggest dog in the college basketball fight. Kentucky went from Tubby Smith's success to Billy Gillispie to John Calipari, and the hand-wringing over the shape of the program seems a distant memory as the decade ends. UK has 2,000-plus wins and a new hero in Calipari. And finally, George Mason pulled off the impossible, beating Michigan State, North Carolina and UConn to reach the Final Four. The fun was watching coach Jim Larranaga and his team have so much fun. Was Mason one of the very best teams of the decade? Perhaps not. But was there a more memorable team? No way. Pat Forde
Players come, players go. NBA forces players to college for one year in a move that helps college game's quality but undermines the academic mission. Conference expansion remakes the map. Sixteen teams in the Big East, ACC goes to 12, Conference USA is reduced to rubble (plus Memphis). Agents, travel-team scam artists and sneaker pimps continue to erode the integrity of the game. Indiana implodes. From firing Bob Knight in 2000 to today, no Cadillac program has endured comparable upheaval this decade. Roy Williams' move is win-win. He leaves Kansas for Carolina and both schools win titles. And one of the running storylines of the decade was the collection of college coaches who went pro, went bust, and returned to their rightful place: Rick Pitino, John Calipari, Lon Kruger, Mike Montgomery, Leonard Hamilton, Tim Floyd. All six have taken (or took, in Floyd's case) programs to the NCAA tournament in their second acts, and two have taken them to the Final Four. Fran Fraschilla
With the advent of the NBA's one-and-done rule, as part of the most recent collective bargaining agreement between NBA owners and the NBA Players Association, the best high school players in the country have had to park themselves in college for at least a season. On the court, it has been a spectacular success. Players like Kevin Durant, Derrick Rose, Michael Beasley, Greg Oden, Mike Conley and Kevin Love stepped onto the college basketball stage and excelled immediately. Durant was the consensus national Player of the Year while guys like Oden, Conley, Love and Rose led their teams to the Final Four. The argument can be made that the one-and-done guys pass through so quickly that they are barely student-athletes, but overall the rule has been good for college basketball. Dana O'Neil
One has to start with the NBA age limit. No decision has more greatly impacted the college game than this one. Those in favor say it at least gently seasons kids before they go pro, while those opposed say it mocks any concept of the student in student-athlete. Playing the grays. Linguists would be impressed at the way college basketball coaches have nuanced the semantics of the NCAA rulebook in their favor. Who's at fault? Everyone. Coaches for looking for ways to end-around the laws and NCAA folks for writing a Beijing phone book full of arcane rules. The Big Beast. Thanks to the always-overriding desires of football, the Big East now stands at an unwieldy 16 teams and has rewritten geography. Milwaukee, Chicago, Louisville and Cincinnati are in the East? Who knew? Rise of the mid-majors. Sure, the big dogs with the deeper pockets still tend to rule the roost, but this decade has bridged the gap like no other. Really, mid-major has become a misnomer: Xavier makes two Elite Eights and one Sweet 16 appearance, George Mason rolls to the Final Four, Kent State makes it all the way to the Elite Eight, Steph Curry and Davidson become America's team and Saint Joseph's falls one shot short of the Final Four. The fall and rise of the premier programs. North Carolina falls apart under Matt Doherty but returns under Roy Williams. Williams bolts Kansas after the national title game, but Bill Self keeps the Jayhawks rock chalkin'. Kentucky spits through an NIT season and returns from the rubble with John Calipari and the top recruiting class in the country, and Indiana boots its Hall of Fame coach, gets busted by the NCAA for the first time in program history and turns a patient eye to Tom Crean.
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THE DECADE: A LOOK BACK

What a memorable and often tumultous past 10 years it has been in college basketball. Sit back and let our panelists of ESPN.com writers and contributors take you through the teams and personalities that made up the decade.
CONTENT
- Ranking and remembering the best games
- Our fondest memories of the decade
- Games we were lucky enough to see
- The decade's top headlines and storylines
- Ranking the best players and coaches
- Ranking the best teams and programs
- Dick Vitale's best of the decade
PAGE 2
- Decade's best games: 1. Cuse-UConn
- Decade's best games: 8. KU-Memphis
- Decade's best games: 12. GMU-UConn
PODCAST
YOUR TURN
- Insider: Indiana rebuilding or reloading?
- Rankin: What Pinson commit means for UNC
- Insider: Can Michigan win the Big Ten?
- Telep: Top 10 late-blooming recruits
- Insider: Marquette reloading with freshmen
