There are many people who predicted the slow death of college basketball after Brandon Jennings went to Europe instead of flunking out, I mean, going to college. Things ended up alright for him.
Let me present Jeremy Tyler, who was projected as potentially the #1 pick in the NBA draft the first year he was eligible. He was considered the best big man prospect since Greg Oden. He even went as far as skipping his senior year of high school and went to play professionally in Europe.
http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=dw-tyler042209He went to play in Israel, where he quit with 5 weeks left in the season and once refused to come out after half time to protest a lack of playing time. He then went to play in Japan, and has been averaging 15.6 minutes per game, 9.4 points and 6.2 rebounds.
He is currently projected as a second round NBA draft pick, though he may work his way into the first round. He went from being the likely #1 pick and probably at worst a lottery pick in a weak draft class to the very real possibility of a non-guaranteed contract and the D League.
Remember this the next time someone tells you that college basketball abuses these players and makes millions off of them while they get nothing in return. Remember this when someone tells you that the one and done rule is bad. Remember this when someone tells you that players are going to go to Europe instead of playing for free.
I'm sure if he could do it again, he'd be playing at Louisville waiting to collect his millions of dollars as a more developed and better player rather than the few hundred thousand he made and the prospect of never reaching one million dollars in career earnings.
It's been my opinion that the "going to Europe" thing has always been garbage. College basketball truly is the best option for virtually all high school players.