The Denver Post

Masters of the one and done

- By Joedy McCreary

DURHAM, N.C.» Duke and Kentucky are viewed as the masters of the oneand-done era, winning championsh­ips with extraordin­arily young rosters.

Both programs have a chance to do it again.

After several potential one-and-done phenoms were bounced from the NCAA Tournament in the opening weekend, the Blue Devils and Wildcats are the teams still playing that have rosters stacked with high-profile freshmen.

Duke, the No. 2 seed in the Midwest Region, starts four freshmen — led by Wooden Award finalist Marvin Bagley III — while Kentucky, the South’s No. 5 seed, features Kevin Knox as its centerpiec­e.

The Wildcats (26-10), arguably the biggest beneficiar­y of a run of upsets in the South, play ninthseede­d Kansas State on Thursday night in Atlanta.

The following night, Duke (28-7) faces a rematch with 11th-seeded Syracuse in a Midwest semifinal in Omaha.

Hall of Fame Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said his freshmen are “not afraid of the moment. It’s how much preparatio­n do they have for the moment?

“We’re trying to condense about four years into eight months,” he said. “I don’t know how it’s going to turn out. You just kind of live it.”

Among the star freshmen who didn’t make it to the tournament’s second weekend were Arizona’s Deandre Ayton, Oklahoma’s Trae Young, Missouri’s Michael Porter Jr., Michigan State’s Jaren Jackson, Alabama’s Collin Sexton and Texas’ Mohamed Bamba. Young and Bamba have already declared for the NBA draft, and Ayton joined them Wednesday.

Both the Blue Devils and Wildcats have previously had predominan­tly young teams cut down the nets at past Final Fours. Kentucky won a national title in 2012 behind top-two draft picks Anthony Davis and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, while Duke’s most recent national title came in 2015 behind three oneand-done freshmen — Jahlil Okafor, Justise Winslow and Tyus Jones.

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